>
> Chapters are indeed useful and are generally speaking a more organized 
> type of hoisting. They're not often discussed so I would also encourage 
> checking them out as a means of organization.
>

Until today I never understood what Chapters were and have just deleted 
them from my docs. A self imposed ignorance because I hadn't bothered to 
read up on them, or rather I read but since 'hoist' didn't mean anything 
the definition didn't help and I lacked the motivation to keep digging into 
further definitions! Thanks for the bump.

For the record of other dwelling-in-darkeness people like myself:

Hoist & dehoist <https://leoeditor.com/glossary.html#index-50>

Hoisting a node redraws the screen that node and its descendants becomes 
the only visible part of the outline. Leo prevents the you from moving 
nodes outside the hoisted outline. Dehoisting a node restores the outline. 
Multiple hoists may be in effect: each dehoist undoes the effect of the 
immediately preceding hoist.

Using Chapters <http://leoeditor.com/commands.html#using-chapters>
@chapter trees define chapters. Selecting a chapter makes only those nodes 
in the chapter visible, much like a hoist

-matt

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