On Mon, Sep 23, 2013 at 2:45 PM, Terry Brown terry_n_br...@yahoo.comwrote:
On Mon, 23 Sep 2013 13:17:04 -0500
Edward K. Ream edream...@gmail.com wrote:
2. what does p.self_and_subtree() return?
Ideally, same as it would anywhere else, if it were possible to
construct a sufficiently
On Fri, Sep 20, 2013 at 7:41 AM, Geoff Evans gtevan...@nl.rogers.comwrote:
Programmable: Leo scripts (Python scripts in Leo outlines) have *easy*
access to all Leo outlines, and *easy* access to all of Leo's own source
code. Conversely, Leo outlines naturally organize even the largest
Imo, the answer is simple: resistance to change. Programmers have a lot
invested in their tools. To be worth serious consideration, Leo must offer
something much better. Furthermore, most programmers likely see moving to
Leo as risky. Using Emacs or vim will seem like a much safer choice.
IMO the biggest problem is that it takes too much time to learn Leo.
When I say Learn Leo, I don't mean Learn or understand the code, I mean
learn what you can do with it.
My true feeling is that Leo is like an infinite ground, where amazing
things can be built. Some of Leo users are already
Hi everyone:
What I would like to do is, say we have two siblings, A and B, and C is a
child of B
A
B
+ C
The bodies are:
B:
@others
C:
g.es(works)
How can I call B (same as if I was doing control+b) from A?
I have tried using this as A's body:
c.executeScript(c.p.next())
But somehow I
On 9/24/2013 7:10 AM, Fidel N wrote:
Hi everyone:
What I would like to do is, say we have two siblings, A and B, and C
is a child of B
A
B
+ C
The bodies are:
B:
@others
C:
g.es(works)
How can I call B (same as if I was doing control+b) from A?
I have tried using this as A's body:
On 9/23/2013 3:45 PM, Terry Brown wrote:
hysterical raisins
Perfect. *slow clap*
That just made my day :)
--Jake
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I second everything Fidel mentioned, but I have a slightly different
view on why people are hesitant to try Leo:
Leo represents a completely new paradigm for editing, programming, and
interacting with data. Well, not completely new, but for many the
surface level seems extremely foreign.
Hi Terry,
Just a quick suggestion for todo.py. Now that there's a calendar icon
next to items with due dates, how about showing items with due dates
that have passed with a red version of the calendar icon? So that at a
glance, users can see if they have any outstanding items that need to
Thanks Jacob, your answer pointed me to the command I needed:
exec(g.getScript(c,p.next()))
On Tuesday, September 24, 2013 1:10:47 PM UTC+2, Fidel N wrote:
Hi everyone:
What I would like to do is, say we have two siblings, A and B, and C is a
child of B
A
B
+ C
The bodies are:
B:
On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 4:51 AM, Fidel N fidelpe...@gmail.com wrote:
IMO the biggest problem is that it takes too much time to learn Leo.
A convincing post, and a hopeful one. Hopeful, because we can do
something about teaching people about Leo; we may not be able to do much
about overcoming
On 9/24/2013 9:25 AM, Jacob Peck wrote:
Hi Terry,
Just a quick suggestion for todo.py. Now that there's a calendar icon
next to items with due dates, how about showing items with due dates
that have passed with a red version of the calendar icon? So that at
a glance, users can see if they
On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 9:16 AM, Edward K. Ream edream...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 4:51 AM, Fidel N fidelpe...@gmail.com wrote:
IMO the biggest problem is that it takes too much time to learn Leo.
A convincing post, and a hopeful one. Hopeful, because we can do something
On Tue, 24 Sep 2013 10:46:44 -0400
Jacob Peck gatesph...@gmail.com wrote:
On 9/24/2013 9:25 AM, Jacob Peck wrote:
Hi Terry,
Just a quick suggestion for todo.py. Now that there's a calendar icon
next to items with due dates, how about showing items with due dates
that have passed
Glad that was helpful.
With bread crumbs I refer to the tool I am about to finish within the
next two or three weeks, the interactive tutorial creator I have talked so
much about.
My aim with this tool is that anything you do, instantly becomes a
tutorial, that can be done again and played
On 9/24/2013 11:28 AM, Terry Brown wrote:
On Tue, 24 Sep 2013 10:46:44 -0400
Jacob Peck gatesph...@gmail.com wrote:
On 9/24/2013 9:25 AM, Jacob Peck wrote:
Hi Terry,
Just a quick suggestion for todo.py. Now that there's a calendar icon
next to items with due dates, how about showing items
Ooh, further idea (but it would encompass a whole bunch of icons):
have the number in the calendar icon correspond with the number of the
day the task is due. Perhaps a bit overboard at 31*3 separate icons per
theme, but it would be even more information at a glance. Just a thought.
--Jake
Terry's code is super cool. I'm paying close attention now that I am
writing a tutorial. For the cognoscenti, the ;; abbreviation is work of
genius, and shows how flexible Terry's abbreviations are.
A simple change to how Leo handles @data nodes will eliminate the need for
the \: convention
On Tue, 24 Sep 2013 14:08:47 -0700 (PDT)
Edward K. Ream edream...@gmail.com wrote:
I propose that lines consisting only
of the characters \n will indicate a blank line that appears in an
abbreviation.
I can't think of any reason you'd want a line consisting solely of
r\n in the limited
On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 10:36 AM, Fidel N fidelpe...@gmail.com wrote:
My aim with this tool is that anything you do, instantly becomes a
tutorial, that can be done again and played forward and backwards.
Basically, your actions become an outline, and other users can play them
again. This
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