I think I only know about it through reading through the importer for 
'ctext'
some time ago and wondering 'where did that format come from'?   ;-)

so I for one have no reason to keep it

J^n

On Wednesday, September 13, 2023 at 5:09:53 PM UTC+1 Edward K. Ream wrote:

> On Wed, Sep 13, 2023 at 10:58 AM Edward K. Ream <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Does anyone know anything about the ctext file format? Googling ctext 
>> yields no relevant hits.
>>
>
> Hmm. The docstring for the ctext importer class is:
>
> QQQ
> Read/Write simple text files with hierarchy embedded in headlines::
>
>     Leading text in root node of subtree
>
>     Etc. etc.
>
>     ### A level one node #####################################
>
>     This would be the text in this level one node.
>
>     And this.
>
>     ### Another level one node ###############################
>
>     Another one
>
>     #### A level 2 node ######################################
>
>     See what we did there - one more '#' - this is a subnode.
>
> Leading / trailing whitespace may not be preserved.  '-' and '/'
> are used in place of '#' for SQL and JavaScript.
> QQQ
>
> The docstring might suffice to fix the quirp, but does not explain where 
> this convention came from.
>
> Unless I hear howls of outrage, I'd like to remove support for this 
> bizarre format.
>
> Edward
>

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