Re: Hard line wrapping

2017-07-03 Thread Lang Hurst
That works. Thanks again for the help, and the great editor. Really enjoying it. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "leo-editor" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to leo-editor+unsubscr...@googlegrou

Hard line wrapping

2017-07-01 Thread Lang Hurst
I am looking to wrap lines I looked through the documentation and also found this discussion from a few years ago. I don't code much anymore. This is all just prose. For my purposes I need a node that wraps at 35 characters, and a second one

Re: process node, output to node and a quick settings question

2017-05-23 Thread Lang Hurst
Terry, Thank you very much. That works great and made my life so much easier. I really appreciate it. -Lang On Mon, May 22, 2017 at 08:48:04PM -0500, Terry Brown wrote: > On Mon, 22 May 2017 16:33:22 -0700 (PDT) > Lang Hurst wrote: > > > Quick settings question first: Where is

Re: process node, output to node and a quick settings question

2017-05-22 Thread Lang Hurst
ssion, > you need to use the following command line options. > > launchLeo.py --session-restore --session-save > > Chris > > On Mon, May 22, 2017 at 4:33 PM, Lang Hurst wrote: > >> Quick settings question first: Where is the setting to make leo open with >> the last o

process node, output to node and a quick settings question

2017-05-22 Thread Lang Hurst
Quick settings question first: Where is the setting to make leo open with the last opened file? I am sure that I've looked at it in my searches, but I can't seem to find it. The bigger issue is this: I currently have two noes that I'll say look like this: node_A: node_B: Bana

Possible to have node contain the results of a command?

2017-05-14 Thread Lang Hurst
I have two nodes that I run a `diff -y` on and use the results in a document. It would be cool to be able to include the node in my document outline and have the results of the command show up and skip a couple manual steps, or really setting up some inodify trigger. Does that make sense? Spent the

Re: Leo as wiki replacement

2017-05-13 Thread Lang Hurst
Oh wow. That was easy enough. This is awesome. Thank you. On Sat, May 13, 2017 at 11:54 AM, Edward K. Ream wrote: > On Sat, May 13, 2017 at 12:55 PM, Lang Hurst wrote: > >> Just want to say you guys have been great. Just need to figure out how to >> enable vim in the editor

Re: Leo as wiki replacement

2017-05-13 Thread Lang Hurst
Just want to say you guys have been great. Just need to figure out how to enable vim in the editor area and I'm going to be golden. Rob, docutils installed a bunch of rst2 on my system. The rst2odt script does a pretty good job of converting the RST document to odt from the command line. On Sat,

Re: Leo as wiki replacement

2017-05-12 Thread Lang Hurst
pting in LaTex). I write extensively in Leo (LaTex, HTML >> and markdown mostly). I recently tried Scrivener, but quickly came back to >> Leo after seeing that Pandoc will be easy enough for me to use. Don't >> hesitate to ask, it's a great group and usually so

Re: Leo as wiki replacement

2017-05-12 Thread Lang Hurst
ty awesome. Nothing like changing up workflow 1/2 way through a Masters, but it seems to be the way that I always work. Anyway, thanks again. -Lang On Friday, May 12, 2017 at 12:00:26 PM UTC-7, Terry Brown wrote: > > On Fri, 12 May 2017 11:11:03 -0700 (PDT) > Lang Hurst > wrote: >

Leo as wiki replacement

2017-05-12 Thread Lang Hurst
Hello. I just spent a few days looking at Leo after seeing a post of Mr. Reams on the npyscreen group. Leo looks pretty damn cool. The problem is I don't do much coding anymore. I mostly just use vimwiki to manage my website, but mostly for organizing my notes and writing papers. I've been writ