I had a look on LEO first. It is definitely not meeting my needs. And if
you look at the documentation of LeoPy.leo (the LEO program itself), you
find out that LEO should actually be called lEO with a very very small
l. LEO does not really support literate programming (warning: that is a
personal opinion).
I am now trying to see whether TeXmacs can be easily made into a LP
environment.
I am a beginner with TeXmacs, but writing a literate document is easy.
One can do that in LaTeX with a designated environment. The only thing
that is missing is a simple way to write the code environments out in
the right order to the right file.
Later, of course, I would like to have hyperlinks between all sorts of
date inside the TeXmacs document. Automatically, compute links from
definitions of identifiers to uses of identifiers. And then I would like
to use TeXmacs as a kind of interactive browser. (Unfortunately, I
haven't found the "Back" button yet.) But that is another story.
Ralf
On 05/20/2007 02:04 PM, Offray Vladimir Luna Cárdenas wrote:
Hi,
I'm also interested in literate programming and I remember someone doing
literate programming attempts on TeXmacs some time ago (may be you can
search the archives on this mailing list). You can look an excellent
practical literate programming tool called Leo:
http://webpages.charter.net/edreamleo/front.html
But it has not the typographical quality and scientific document
oriented nature of TeXmacs. Anyway it could be useful.
Cheers,
Offray
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