On Fri, Oct 25, 2013 at 8:22 AM, Kent Tenney <[email protected]> wrote:

> Right, and though I'm a Leo fan, I always end up doing some
> or most editing in vim, for a number of reasons, so I'd never
> allow sentinels in my files. It takes a commitment to the unique
> benefits of Leo to sentinelize files, one I wouldn't expect from
> a newbie. That's why I think the hook should be baited only with
> @path, @auto, @shadow, @button, @command ...
> once they're landed, hit them with <<sections>> clones ...
> some might be swayed towards Edwards proclivities,
> but don't let them reject Leo on the basis of it's interest in
> mucking with their files.
>

I wrote the Leo vs org mode post as pre-writing for Leo's docs.  Not sure
if any of it is worth adding.

As happy side effect of my research, I realized that creating source files
with org mode is equivalent to using @nosent.  How lame is that?

Afaik, org mode has nothing like Leo's automatic untangling (converting an
external file to an outline).  It's all the other way (tangling: converting
an outline to an external file) and must be done explicitly to boot.  Like
@rst without @auto-rst.

Heck, if org mode really is that feeble we could just recommend using
@nosent!  (Laughs hysterically...)

Edward

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