Thanks for your suggestion!

But this is the only node. In its body text it contains hundreds of othe 
nodes wrapped in an xml file. So deleting that node would delete all the 
contents of this Leo file.

In the meantime I was able to repair the Leo file using an external editor. 
It contained some Erlang source files. The Erlang source code uses some 
data structures that look like Leo section references '<<...>>'. That 
caused some hiccups so that in the end Leo wasn't able to parse the Leo 
file correctly and put everything under one node. Basically, the repair was 
just removing the t nodes that contained Erlang code.

I was just about to report this solution, when I saw your answer. Thanks 
again!

On Monday, September 16, 2024 at 9:33:08 AM UTC+2 Edward K. Ream wrote:

> On Mon, Sep 16, 2024 at 12:56 AM 'rengel' via leo-editor <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I have a leo file stored in 'D:/dev/.leo/Dev.leo'.
>>
>> When I open this file with Leo (on Windows 10), I get
>>
>> '@edit D:/dev/.leo/Dev.leo' 
>>
>
> Strange things happen. I would just delete the node.
>
> Edward
>

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