I just found FeatherNotes, a Linux-only Qt-based note taking program.

It's at FeatherNotes <https://github.com/tsujan/FeatherNotes>.  Not that 
I'm suggesting it could replace Leo, but it's interesting to see the 
similarities and differences.  It's a tree-based, hierarchical program, 
with a tree view.  One difference from Leo is that the nodes are rich text 
rather than plain text, and they can contain images, tables, etc.  In this 
way they are more like word processor pages than Leo's nodes.

Although the install instructions tell you to compile it, FeatherNotes is 
available as a standard installable package in both Debian and Mint (the 
only OSs I checked) using Synaptics (i.e., apt-get, etc.).

I've only played with it for a few minutes.  As a Leo user, I feel almost 
crippled trying to use it, but if I were after just a note-taking app, it 
would probably be quite satisfactory.

I stumbled across it while I was wondering how practical it would be to 
embed images in Leo nodes.  It turns out to be easy to insert them.  
However, to manage them, save and restore nodes containing the images, 
using scripts that operate on the contents of nodes, etc. looks like it 
would be tricky without making serious changes to the way Leo works.  If 
you want to see images mixed in with text, you can already do that in Leo 
with RestructuredText/Markdown/Asciidoc nodes using the viewrendered3 
plugin.

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