Sounds interesting and I could see how that could be useful. I'm not aware
of anything like that (but I've never thought to look before). I think I'd
start by seeing what the Vim and Emacs communities might have done in this
area (since they're old and have had lots of room and people for
On Wednesday, January 30, 2019 at 6:02:23 PM UTC, Offray Vladimir Luna
Cárdenas wrote:
>
> Hi Jon,
>
> I use Taskwarrior for the kind of activities you are describing. It always
> there, in my drop down terminal and it has nice API and DOM. You could use
> it in the same way and only use Leo
Hi,
I think that the main issue is that Leo is a vast system to explore, but
it provides us with a unified metaphor to traverse it: the outline. This
means that the system can increase complexity, but you can keep the same
strategies to navigate such complexity. Something similar happens in the
Hi Jon,
I use Taskwarrior for the kind of activities you are describing. It
always there, in my drop down terminal and it has nice API and DOM. You
could use it in the same way and only use Leo to query Taskwarrior and
present then info you want in a outline, or use some of the Python open
source
The trick for me was first to figure out where to look (LeoPyRef.leo). Once
I figured that out, navigating the outline was pretty straightforward. Just
speaking for me, the other challenges are:
1. Knowing what to look for. (I made an incorrect assumption about which
part of the script
On Mon, Jan 28, 2019 at 4:56 PM Matt Wilkie wrote:
>
> (file under user interfaces to be inspired by)
Thanks for the link.
Edward
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A recent question about g.getScript got me thinking...
The OP was asking for information that I couldn't possibly know, but is
trivial to discover.
First, you find the node that defines g.getScript in leoPy.leo, aka
leoPyRef.leo. The "trick" if you can even call it that, is to *look at the
Oh - I forgot to mention, I use clones, but rarely, mostly because many of
my leaf nodes are small, separate files.
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Much has already been said, but I want to add anyway my view.
I am a manager, physicist and perhaps an electrical engineer. I use
serveral differnt editors all the time, for different reasons, like vim and
scite sometime emacs. I use Leo on complex projects, involving many files.
I have small
On Wed, 30 Jan 2019 02:20:20 -0800 (PST)
jkn wrote:
> Hi all
>I would quite like to use Leo to remind me of events - a bit like
> a locally-based version of Google Calendar. So (I guess) I would have
> a special node(s) with a list of events in some form:
>
> "3rd Friday of each month; pay
If you have emacs, see how it is done in org-mode. Note also, that Leo can
understand already an org-mode subset.
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Hi all
I would quite like to use Leo to remind me of events - a bit like a
locally-based version of Google Calendar. So (I guess) I would have a
special node(s) with a list of events in some form:
"3rd Friday of each month; pay XXX bill"
"Aug 31st each year: Aunt Amelia's Birthday"
"23rd
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