This is Leo's Frequently Asked Questions document.
Contents
Missing modules can cause installation problems. If the installer doesn't work (or puts up a dialog containing no text), you may install Leo from the .zip file as described at How to install Leo on Windows. However you are installing Leo, be sure to run Leo from a console window because as a last resort Leo prints error messages to the console.
From: http://sourceforge.net/forum/message.php?msg_id=1685399
When building Tcl on Linux, do not specify "--enable-threads" Only use Tcl with the default "threads not enabled" case.
Here is how to build Tk without thread support:
Leo's setup.py script is intended only to create source distributions. It can't be used to install Leo because Leo is not a Python package.
First, read the tutorial. This will be enough to get you started if you just want to use Leo as an outliner. If you intend to use Leo for programming, read the Quick start for programmers, then look at Leo's source code in the file LeoPy.leo. Spend 5 or 10 minutes browsing through the outline. Don't worry about details; just look for the following common usage patterns:
You will lose much of Leo's power if you don't use clones. See Clones & views for full details.
Use @file trees (including @thin trees) unless you are sure you must have the extra flexibility of @root trees. Indeed, @file trees are much easier to use than @root trees:
Use methods for any code that is used (called or referenced) more than once.
Sections are convenient in the following circumstances:
When you want to refer to snippets of code the can not be turned into methods. For example, many plugins start with the code like this:
<< docstring >> << imports >> << version history >> << globals >>
None of these sections could be replaced by methods.
When you want to refer to a snippet of code that shares local variables with the enclosing code. This is surprisingly easy and safe to do, provided the section is used only in one place. Section names in such contexts can be clearer than method names. For example:
<< init ivars for writing >>
In short, I create sections when convenient, and convert them to functions or methods if they need to be used in several places.
A dangerous delete is a deletion of a node so that all the data in the node is deleted everywhere in an outline. The data is gone, to be retrieved only via undo or via backups. It may not be obvious which deletes are dangerous in an outline containing clones. Happily, there is a very simple rule of thumb:
Deleting a non-cloned node is *always* dangerous. Deleting a cloned node is *never* dangerous.
We could also consider a delete to be dangerous if it results in a node being omitted from a derived file. This can happen as follows. Suppose we have the following outline (As usual, A' indicates that A is marked with a clone mark):
- @thin spam.py - A' - B - Projects - A' - B
Now suppose we clone B, and move the clone so the tree looks like this:
- @thin spam.py - A' - B' - Projects - A' - B' - B'
If (maybe much later), we eliminate B' as a child of A will get:
- @thin spam.py - A' - Projects - A' - B
B has not been destroyed, but B is gone from @thin spam.py! So in this sense deleting a clone node can also be called dangerous.
Using @thin trees can eliminate most problems with using Leo in cvs environments:
Developers should use @thin trees to create derived files in any kind of cooperative environment.
The cvs repository contains "reference" .leo files. These reference files should containing nothing but @thin nodes. Reference files will change only when new derived files get added to the project.
Important: Leo's cvs repository contains the reference versions of the following .leo files: LeoPyRef.leo and LeoPluginsRef.leo. However, Leo's distributions contain the non-reference versions of those files: LeoPy.leo and LeoPlugins.leo. These two files have many @thin nodes. There is no reference file for test.leo even though it contains @thin leoTest.py. It would be clumsy to use testRef.leo, and there is less need to do so.
Developers will use local copies of reference files for their own work. For example, instead of using LeoPyRef.leo directly, I use a copy called LeoPy.leo. My local copy can contain nodes other than @thin nodes.
You have two options, depending on whether you want to be able to use sections or not.
You have two options, depending on whether you want sentinel lines in your derived file or not.
Question: I'm writing a Windows Script Component, which is an XML file with a CData section containing javascript. I can get the XML as I want it by using @language html, but how can I get the tangling comments inside the CData section to be java-style comments rather than html ones?
Answer: In @file trees you use the @delims directive to change comment delimiters. For example:
@delims /* */ Javascript stuff @delims <-- --> HTML stuff
Important: Leo can not revert to previous delimiters automatically; you must change back to previous delimiters using another @delims directive.
In @root trees you can work around this problem using the @silent directive.
By Zvi Boshernitzan: I was having trouble disabling <?php with comments (and couldn't override the comment character for the start of the page). Finally, I found a solution that worked, using php's heredoc string syntax:
@first <?php @first $comment = <<<EOD EOD; // php code goes here. echo "boogie"; $comment2 = <<<EOD @last EOD; @last ?>
or:
@first <?php @first /* */ echo "hi"; @delims /* */ @last ?>
Here is a posting which might be helpful: http://sourceforge.net/forum/message.php?msg_id=2300457 The @first directive is the key to output usable code in unsupported languages. For example, to use Leo with the Basic language, use the following:
@first $IFDEF LEOHEADER @delims ' @c $ENDIF
So this would enable a basic compiler to "jump" over the "true" LEO-header-lines. Like this:
$IFDEF LEOHEADER <-conditional compilation directive #@+leo-ver=4 <-these lines not compiled #@+node:@file QParser005.INC #@@first #@delims ' '@@c $ENDIF <-... Until here! <rest of derived code file ... >
This changes the comment symbol the apostrophe, making comments parseable by a BASIC (or other language.)
Use the @first directive in @file trees or @nosent trees. Use the @silent directive in @root trees.
The @first directive puts lines at the very start of files derived from @file. For example, the body text of @file spam.py might be:
@first #! /usr/bin/env python
The body text of @file foo.perl might be:
@first #/usr/bin/perl
Leo recognizes the @first directive only at the start of the body text of @file nodes. No text may precede @first directives. More than one @first directive may exist, like this:
@first #! /usr/bin/env python @first # more comments.
Leo has good support for CWEB. @file trees can organize any part of CWEB code using noweb sections. You can also use @asis, @noref or @nosent trees to create cweb files. See CWEB mode for full details.
No. Everything in an @file trees must be part of the derived file: orphan and @ignore nodes are invalid in @file trees. This restriction should not be troublesome. For example, you can organize your outline like this:
+ myClass ..+ ignored stuff ..+ @file myClass
(As usual, + denotes a headline.) So you simply create a new node, called myClass, that holds your @file trees and stuff you don't want in the @file trees.
By Rich Ries. Some older C compilers don't understand the "//" comment symbol, so using @language C won't work. Moreover, the following does not always work either:
@comment /* */
This generates the following sentinel line:
/*@@comment /* */*/"
in the output file, and not all C compilers allow nested comments, so the last *\/ generates an error. The solution is to use:
#if 0 @comment /* */ #endif
Leo is happy: it recognizes the @comment directive. The C compiler is happy: the C preprocessor strips out the offending line before the C compiler gets it.
@ignore can only be used in the root node of @file trees. It tells Leo to ignore the tree.
The @ignore directive can not be used elsewhere in @thin trees and @file trees because of the way Leo recreates outlines from derived files. This is an absolutely crucial restriction and will never go away. For a few more details, see Leo 4.0: Eliminating error 'recovery' in Chapter 9: History of Leo.
There are several workaround, as shown in LeoPy.leo:
See the instructions are in LeoPy.leo in:
``Notes:How To:How to add support for a new language section.
This section contains clones of all relevant parts of Leo that you will change. Coming in Leo 4.4: Leo will use JEdit's language description files to drive the syntax colorer. To add support for a new language, just add another such description file.
You have two options:
You can 'revert' to old key bindings as follows:
Find the @thin leoApp.py node in leoPy.leo. In the ctor for the LeoApp class set self.use_psyco to True or False. You will find this ctor in the node:
Code-->Core classes...-->@thin leoApp.py-->app.__init__
Note that this ivar can not be set using settings in leoSettings.leo because Leo uses g.app.use_psyco before processing configuration settings.
The 'official' way to start a replace command is:
<Ctrl-shift-r>find-pattern<return>replace-text<return>
But suppose you with start with:
<ctrl-f>find-pattern
and then realize you want to do a replace instead of a find. No problem. The following also works:
<Ctrl-f>find-pattern<Ctrl-shift-r>replace-text<return>
In other words, you can think of <ctrl-f> as meaning 'show the find dialog'. There is another trick you should know. After typing <ctrl-f> or <shift-ctrl-r> you can use <alt-ctrl> keys to set or clear find options. For example:
<ctrl-f><alt-ctrl-w><find-pattern><return>
That is, <ctrl-f>`shows the find dialog, `<alt-ctrl-w> toggles the Whole Word checkbox and <return> starts the search. You can type the <alt-ctrl> keys anytime after <ctrl-f> (or <shift-ctrl-r>) and before <return>. You can also type multiple <alt-ctrl-keys> to toggle multiple checkboxes.
The trick is to create a workflow that separates editing from testing. Putting test code in LeoPy.leo would waste a lot of time. To run tests you would have to exit Leo and reload LeoPy.leo. A much quicker way is to put all test code in a test.leo file. So to change and test code, do the following:
That's all. Python will recompile any changed .py files in the new copy of Leo. Note: I create a batch file called t.bat that runs test.leo, so to the "edit-reload-test" cycle is just:
The benefits of the new workflow:
The Import Files dialog allows you to select multiple files provided you are running Python 2.3 or above. There is also an importFiles script in LeoPy.leo. You can use that script as follows:
import leoImport leoImport.importFiles(aDirectory, ".py")
This will import all .py files from aDirectory, which should be a full path to a particular directory. You could use ".c" to import all .c files, etc.
By Rich Ries. I often rework C code that's already been "Leo-ized"--the first pass was quick and dirty to get it going. When I do subsequent passes, I wind up with subnodes that are out of order with the sequence found in the main node. It's not a big deal, but I like 'em ordered. With just one editor pane, clicking on the node to move would switch focus to that node. I'd then need to re-focus on the main node. A minor nuisance, but it does slow you down.
My solution is to open a second editor with its focus on the main node. Switch to the other editor, and, referring to the first editor pane, move the nodes as you like. The second editor's pane will change focus to the node you're moving, but the first editor will stay focused on the main node. It's a lot easier to do than to describe!
One way is to link directly to the media file from a Leo node (with @url) and write a scriptbutton to wrap all URL-nodes under the current node in a single HTML page (using the HTML browser trick at http://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?thread_id=1201579&forum_id=10226).
Then, you can view your media in two ways:
You could probably generalize this idea of "collect all @url nodes under current node and display as HTML in browser" into a general-purpose plugin. However, the plugin would have to be somewhat smart in mapping a link to its corresponding HTML code (e.g. an image link gets mapped to an <img> HTML tag, a link to a Flash file gets mapped to an <embed> tag, etc).
Question: It would be nice if Leo could open empty files. I tend to be "document oriented" rather than "application oriented" in my thinking and prefer "create empty file at location -> open it with program" to "start program -> create new file -> save it at location".
Answer by Paul Paterson: If you are on Windows 98/2000/XP then the procedure is as follows...
Now you should have a New:Leo File option in Explorer. This creates a duplicate of the file you saved. This can be useful because you could make a template Leo file containing some standard nodes that you always have and then save this.
From: http://sourceforge.net/forum/message.php?msg_id=3240374 Using Leo's File-Export-Flatten Outline commands creates a MORE style outline which places all Leo body sections on the left margin. The headlines are indented with tabs which Excel will read as a tab delimited format. Once inside Excel there are benefits.
The most obvious benefit inside Excel is that the body sections (Excel first column) can be selected easily and highlighted with a different font color. This makes the MORE format very readable. Save a copy of your sheet as HTML and now you have a web page with the body sections highlighted.
It is possible to hide columns in Excel. Hiding the first column leaves just the headlines showing.
Formulas based on searching for a string can do calculations in Excel. For example if a heading "Current Assets" appears on level 4 then the body formula:
=INDEX(A:A,MATCH("Current Assets",D:D,0)+1)
will retrieve it. The +1 after match looks down one row below the matched headline. The trick is to place all your headlines in quotes because Excel will see + "Current Assets" from the MORE outline. When Excel tries without the quotes it thinks it is a range name and displays a #N/A error instead of the headline. Also you must place a child node below to get the + sign instead of a - sign which would give a MORE headline of -"Current assets" , also is an error.
I think there is some interesting possibility here because of the enforcement of Leo body text being always in the first column. The Leo outline provides additional reference to organizing the problem not typical of spreadsheet models. Beyond scripting in Python, Excel is good at doing interrelated calculations and detecting problems like circular references. In Excel Tools-Options-General is a setting for r1c1 format which then shows numbers instead of letters for column references. Using this would allow entries like this in the leo body:
1000 3500 =R[-1]C+R[-2]C
In Excel you would see 4500 below those two numbers. This is completely independent of where the block of three cells exists on the sheet.
By Rich Ries
There is no direct way to make script buttons available in multiple Leo files. Sure, you could copy and paste the @button nodes, but there is a slightly easier way using the "New Buttons" plugin.
Open a new Leo file.
It's easier to do this than to explain it!
This is a known bug in Tk that prevents this on Windows. The obvious Tk code causes a hard crash in the Python dll: it's the only time Leo has taken such a hard crash. The UniversalScrolling plugin is an attempt at a workaround.
Scrolling with the mouse wheel may be possible on Linux. See the code in createTkTreeCanvas in leoTkinterFrame.py
By Dave Hein: The cause of the keymapping problem is a issue with the X11 keyboard mapping, not with Tk. If you have this problem on your system, issue the command:
xmodmap -pke
and look in the results for the line for keycode 22. I'll bet it shows something like:
keycode 22 = BackSpace Terminate_Server
That second token ("Terminate_Server") is what is supposed to be mapped to Shift-Backspace. You want this second token to be either not present or to be BackSpace. To fix this, create a file (e.g. .Xmodmap) and give it the content:
keycode 22 = BackSpace
then run the command:
xmodmap .Xmodmap
This fixes the problem. On my system this also disables the ability to terminate the X server using Ctrl-Alt-BackSpace. This is because of some conflict with xdb (xdb is the newer keyboard mapping facility in XFree86; xmodmap is the old original X11 keyboard mapping facility). I'm still working on that. I'm also not able to get xmodmap to make this change during X11 startup (again because of conflicts with xdb). But I'm working on that as well.
For the most part, docutils does a good job of reporting errors. docutils prints a message to the console and inserts an unmistakable error message in the generated .html file. Important: On Windows it is helpful to Run Leo from a console window.
However, in some cases, docutils crashes instead of properly reporting the problem. There are several workarounds:
The crashes I have seen arise from the following bug in docutils. Hyperlinks in image:: markup must be lower case. This will work:
.. |back| image:: arrow_lt.gif :target: faq_
This will crash:
.. |back| image:: arrow_lt.gif :target: FAQ_
So avoid this crash by making sure to use lower case targets in :target: markup.
You can change the docutils source slightly so that it prints a traceback when it crashes. (The rst3 plugin should be able to do this, but I haven't figured out how yet.) It's easy enough to do this:
Find the file core.py in top-level docutils folder. Typically this folder will be in Python's site-packages folder.
Open core.py in some editor other than Leo.
Find the method called report_Exceptions.
Insert the following lines at the very start of this method:
print 'EKR: added traceback' import traceback ; traceback.print_exc()
This will cause a traceback whenever docutils crashes. I have found that such tracebacks are generally enough to locate the general area of the problem. Note: These tracebacks go to the console window, so you should Run Leo from a console window.
As a last resort, you can isolate syntax errors by reducing your input files until they work again, then adding sections until you get a crash. This is easy enough to do (when using the rst3 plugin) by change a headline x to @rst-ignore-tree x.
Leo (and other programs) often send more detailed error messages to stderr, the output stream that goes to the console window. In Linux and MacOS environments, python programs normally execute with the console window visible. On Windows, can run Leo with the console window visible by associating .leo files with python.exe not pythonw.exe. For full instructions about how to do this, see Associating Leo with .leo Files.
Just run Leo in a console window. At the point you want to drop into the debugger, execute this line:
g.pdb()
All output from pdb goes to stdout, which is the console window. It would be good to create a subclass of pdb.Pdb that uses Leo's log pane rather than a console window, but I haven't done that. It could be done easily enough in a plugin...
Important: I recommend using g.trace instead of pdb. For example:
g.trace(x)
prints the name of the function or method containing the trace, and the value of x. g.callers is often useful in combination with g.trace. g.callers(5) returns the last 5 entries of the call stack. For example:
g.trace(x,g.callers(5))
Used this way, g.trace shows you patterns that will be invisible using pdb.
The import commands insert @ignore directives in the top-level node. Leo does this so that you won't accidentally overwrite your files after importing them. Change the filename following @file or @root as desired, then remove the @ignore directive. Saving the outline will then create the derived file.
For versions of Leo before 4.0 and for versions of Python before 2.3, Leo will draw a Leo icon in Leo windows only if you have installed Fredrik Lundh's PIL and tkIcon packages.
This is a known bug in Tk/Tkinter and there is no good workaround. Some keyboards allow you to disable the caps-lock key.
From: http://sourceforge.net/forum/message.php?msg_id=1685399
When building Tcl on Linux, do not specify "--enable-threads" Only use Tcl with the default "threads not enabled" case.
Here is how to build Tk without thread support:
Missing modules can cause installation problems. If the installer doesn't work (or puts up a dialog containing no text), you may install Leo from the .zip file as described at How to install Leo on Windows. However you are installing Leo, be sure to run Leo from a console window because as a last resort Leo prints error messages to the console.
Python's decorator syntax is ill-conceived. This syntax file hack works well enough anyway to work with Leo @ markup:
syn region leoComment start="^@\s*" end="^@c\s*$" syn match pythonDecorator "@\S\S+" display nextgroup=pythonFunction skipwhite
Leo's setup.py script is intended only to create source distributions. It can't be used to install Leo because Leo is not a Python package.
Question and answer from plumloco.
Add the equivalent of:
import sys leosrc = "path/to/leo/src" if leosrc not in sys.path: sys.path.append(leosrc) import leoBridge
at the head of each file that uses leoBridge.
The problem is not importing leoBridge itself but (if I use 'from leo.src') the importing of plugins, who get a different leoGlobals from leoBridge, without g.app etc, and so do not work if they rely on dynamic values in g.etc.
> Why can't you simply add leo/src to sys.path in sitecustomize.py?
Putting leosrc on the python path as you suggest would put forty python modules in the global module namespace for all python programs when I want just one. Also, I have a safe working copy of leo and a cvs/testing version. I would wish to test any programs against the testing version while using the working version, but both /src directories can't be exposed at the same time.
> Do you need plugins while running from the leoBridge?
Afraid so, at least the rst3 plugin. The solution I am using now is to place:
sys.modules['leoGlobals'] = leoGlobals
in leoBridge after import leoGlobals.
This, together with placing an empty __init__.py in leo/src, allows my scripts to be portable over the several computers/platforms I need to use them on, and makes testing scripts against multiple leo versions easy. It does mean that my scripts are not portable to other leo users but that is not likely to be a problem.
Set @bool ignore_unbound_non_ascii_keys = False in LeoSettings.leo or myLeoSettings.leo.
Internally, Leo represents all strings as unicode. Leo translates from a particular encoding to Unicode when reading .leo files or derived files. Leo translates from Unicode to a particular encoding when writing derived files. You may see strange looking characters if your text editor is expecting a different encoding. The encoding used in any derived file is shown in the #@+leo sentinel line like this:
#@+leo-encoding=iso-8859-1.
Exception: the encoding is UTF-8 if no -encoding= field exists. You can also use the @encoding directive to set the encoding for individual derived files. If no @encoding directive is in effect, Leo uses the following settings to translate to and from unicode:
The encoding specified in the following line of new .leo files:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8">
The default is UTF-8 (upper case for compatibility for old versions of Leo). Important: once a .leo file is created the <?xml..."> line can only be changed by hand. This may cause unicode errors the next time the .leo file is loaded, so you should change the <?xml..."> line by hand only when first creating a .leo file.
The encoding that Leo uses to communicate with Tk text widgets. You would typically use this setting only in an emergency. The section called:
<< set app.tkEncoding >>
in app.finishCreate sets this encoding as follows:
Neither b nor c are guaranteed to give a valid encoding in all systems, and Leo will ignore invalid encodings returned from b or c. Therefore, setting the tk_encoding setting may be needed.
Add the following to the start of your scripts:
@first # -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
Without this line, constructs such as:
u = u'a-é-賢-z' u = 'a-é-賢-z'
will not work when executed with Leo's execute script command. Indeed, the Execute Script command creates the script by writing the tree containing the script to a string. This is done using Leo's write logic, and this logic converts the unicode input to a utf-8 encoded string. So all non-ascii characters (including both the é and 賢 characters) get converted to their equivalent in the utf-8 encoding. Call these encoding <e1> and <e2>. In effect the script becomes:
u = u'a-<e1>-<e2>-z' u = 'a-<e2>-<e>-z'
which is certainly not what the script writer intended! Rather than defining strings using actual characters, Instead, one should use the equivalent escape sequences. For example:
u = u'a-\u0233-\u8ce2-z' u = 'a-\u0233-\u8ce2-z'
The encoding used in the file being imported doesn't match the encoding in effect for Leo. You have two options:
First, you must change Python's default encoding to something other than 'ascii'. To do this, put the following in your sitecustomize.py file in Python's Lib folder:
import sys sys.setdefaultencoding('utf-8') # 'iso-8859-1' is another choice.
You must restart Python after doing this: sys.setdefaultencoding can not be called after Python starts up.
Leo's g.es_print function attempts to convert incoming arguments to unicode using the default encoding. For example, the following Leo script always prints La Peña:
@first # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # The line above is required for Python 2.5 for s in (u'La Pe\xf1a','La Peña',u'La Peña'): g.es_print(s)
For still more details, see: http://www.diveintopython.org/xml_processing/unicode.html