Is there, like, a distribution of #emacs or some other graphical app for working with #orgMode files on the desktop?
-
Is there, like, a distribution of #emacs or some other graphical app for working with #orgMode files on the desktop? I feel like a lot more people would benefit from org-mode than are up to the task of configuring Emacs.
https://www.deepdwn.com/ is frustratingly close, but uses its own, Markdown-based syntax...
-
Is there, like, a distribution of #emacs or some other graphical app for working with #orgMode files on the desktop? I feel like a lot more people would benefit from org-mode than are up to the task of configuring Emacs.
https://www.deepdwn.com/ is frustratingly close, but uses its own, Markdown-based syntax...
@clayote it's also not really protocolized
-
@clayote it's also not really protocolized
@hipsterelectron well if orgmode's website is to be trusted, I'm asking for https://logseq.com/
What a weird name, though
-
@hipsterelectron well if orgmode's website is to be trusted, I'm asking for https://logseq.com/
What a weird name, though
@clayote yeah i thought that too
-
@clayote yeah i thought that too
@hipsterelectron huh. I pointed Logseq at my notes folder, and there are my org files, presented like normal bulleted lists in a word processor or whatever.
I guess this is the thing!
It doesn't support everything I want from an org file editor, notably inline TODOs with priorities... which makes sense, since it's not 1.0 yet. I am a little confused that, though it's written in Clojure, they didn't actually embed org-mode itself--surely, they could write a translator from the one Lisp to the other in Emacs Lisp itself?
-
@hipsterelectron huh. I pointed Logseq at my notes folder, and there are my org files, presented like normal bulleted lists in a word processor or whatever.
I guess this is the thing!
It doesn't support everything I want from an org file editor, notably inline TODOs with priorities... which makes sense, since it's not 1.0 yet. I am a little confused that, though it's written in Clojure, they didn't actually embed org-mode itself--surely, they could write a translator from the one Lisp to the other in Emacs Lisp itself?
@clayote i think an independent reimplementation is a good idea
-
@clayote i think an independent reimplementation is a good idea
@hipsterelectron oh shit the TODO feature is available as a plugin! this rules
-
Is there, like, a distribution of #emacs or some other graphical app for working with #orgMode files on the desktop? I feel like a lot more people would benefit from org-mode than are up to the task of configuring Emacs.
https://www.deepdwn.com/ is frustratingly close, but uses its own, Markdown-based syntax...
Back in 1994 my gradeschool kids had web pages they created in #Emacs. It's not hard. It is DEEP if you want to go there, and that depth includes how it can deliver org-mode &c, but a casual user does not need to learn elisp to use it. For years a blind musician friend used Emacspeak as his email and web client. (somewhere exists my Gentle Introduction to Emacspeak)
People are actually very good at learning, they just don't want to

I have been told doom and space emacs are very turnkey and GUI friendly
-
R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic