On Sun, Apr 14, 2019 at 8:25 AM vili <viljem.tisni...@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, April 14, 2019 at 2:48:02 PM UTC+2, Edward K. Ream wrote:
>>
>>
>> Similarly, pairs of real numbers become complex numbers, with properties
>> very different from reals.
>>
>
> This is in fact quite an exact analogy: Leo's structure is capable of
> boiling down any COMPLEX real world "mess" to REALly nice and orderly tree
> of nodes (due to clones). That is why IMO, so many people report aha
> moments, and there are some of us, non programmers, using this superb
> organizational tool for PIM purposes.
>

:-)

What benefit do you programmers expect from moving Leo to web? IMO the
> "beautiful projection" is conceptually the essence of Leo. Before moving
> Leo to the web application, maybe first is necessary to decide the purpose
> of web-Leo.
>

You can run Leo with a web gui like this:

python launchLeo.py --no-splash --no-plugins --gui=browser:firefox-browser

This is the *full* Leo, using Leo's existing core.  The only difference is
that drawing happens in the browser.

For programming, there is really no advantage in doing this.  However,
running in a browser may provide JS rendering capabilities that Qt lacks.
But this is mostly speculation.  I wrote the leoflexx plugin
(--gui=browser) as a proof of concept, and as a way of learning Almar
Klein's flexx library <https://flexx.readthedocs.io/en/stable/>.

Edward

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