Without knowing anything about the plugin, it looks like the signature of
fc.write_leo_file() is currently not the signature the plugin thinks it
is. I'd try commenting out the extra params in the plugin, and see what
what you get:
ok = self.c.fileCommands.write_Leo_file(
Would you explain what you would like to happen? Do you want to get a Leo
outline with the nodes named and indented according to the OPML file? If
so, that should be pretty easy to write a script for even without a plugin
(in case it's too hard to get it functioning).
On Monday, August 29,
Hello Edward,
Well, since my original message has now appeared in the group page, I'll
repost only the relevant part, just in case. I also attached here an OPML
file done in 5 minutes with OmniOutliner (THE outliner reference, I dare
say) on my iPhone and saved as OPML. That's the basic format
On Mon, Aug 29, 2022 at 5:15 PM chr...@gmail.com wrote:
> I haven't seen my first message in the list yet, the forum is probably
> moderated...
> Further tests editing the guilty function call:
>
I approved both messages, but I only see this one.
Leo opens leo_test1.opml when I change .opml to
Hi,
If you want you can skip to "*Problem*" below.
I'm new to Leo but not to Python, and not to the world. For 30 years, I've
been trying to recapture the magic of MORE (and ThinkTank...) , but on
Windows (had to switch in 1989, never used a Mac since). No way. Recently
got fed up, got a
I haven't seen my first message in the list yet, the forum is probably
moderated...
Further tests editing the guilty function call:
* File "C:\Python310\lib\site-packages\leo\plugins\leoOPML.py", line 319,
in writeFileok = self.c.fileCommands.write_Leo_file(fileName,
1)TypeError: