I think I've heard of those! And yeah… while orgmode from what I've seen is 
useful for basically everything, you're right, I'm not an Emacs user :)

(Nimib(ook) is really cool though)

And those tools—as I understand it—don't really let you order your code in any 
other way other than in a straight linear fashion, as if you are writing just 
code. I do see that `ntangle` has plans at least for noweb-style references, 
which would actually make that possible.

I think it just goes to show that the "notebook" style is far more practical 
than the method that was originally proposed back in the 80s, especially with 
it playing heavily on interactivity (output directly beneath the code and 
such), which is more exciting than passively reading code.

Perhaps it's valid as well—after all, does it matter what it is if at the end 
readers understand what the code is doing?

I have yet to try [Leo](https://leo-editor.github.io/leo-editor/) though…

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