Heh.

I lived my entire life in one file for almost a decade. That file created 
and controlled over a thousand others in the file system, but only one Leo 
file.

I like context as an organizing principle. I learned to stop thinking in a 
file centric way when it comes to Leo. Now I have five or six different 
files, one for each of the different contexts I work in: Programming, 
Fiction, Non-Fiction, Websites, Meta (for stuff about Leo like the recent 
theming work), etc.

As far as flaunting convention, Leo isn't really like any other program.  I 
am not sure if the tyranny of the marketplace should apply to it.

Chris

On Tuesday, March 20, 2018 at 8:40:36 AM UTC-7, rengel wrote:
>
> ... Leo doesn't use tabs to switch files...
>
>  
> Well, I do. 'workbook' in one tab, 'Settings' in a second tab, 
> and some application-specific Leo file in a third tab. 
> That way I might work on three or four Leo files in parallel.
> But thanks, for trying to explain.
>
> Reinhard
>
>
>
>

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