So, just discovered Leo editor, probably going to use it since it looks 
like a killer IDE *and* a good writer companion app (I'm both a webdev and 
a writer).

I've been scratching my head all day about Markdown, though. With rST3, one 
can "compile" a rST tree into a .html file; my wish is to achieve something 
similar with Markdown (i.e. write a document in the form of a tree of 
Markdown sections, and have a .html file at the time of saving / 
"exporting"). It looks like it's probably possible, but at this point I 
figure asking the community for advice probably is going to be faster than 
just keeping on poking around.

The "warmest trail" I have is maaaybe installing Sphinx, getting it to 
support Markdown and setting Leo up so that when the rST command is run, 
the intermediate file is .md and it's then interpreted as Markdown by 
Sphinx, creating the "properly compiled" .html file through Sphinx rather 
than Leo. But this feels like it's leaning into overkill territory, and I'm 
not even sure that'd work...

Is there a simpler way? Am I even thinking of this "a right way"?

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