There are a number of interesting topics here. Like others, I would be very keen to share my org-based projects with non-Emacs users. I also only have very limited time & skills to contribute. There is an existing extension for org-mode on vscode here: https://github.com/vscode-org-mode/vscode-org-mode. That might be the best place to help out. One piece of low-hanging fruit would be simply to add an HTML renderer to that plugin (https://github.com/orgapp/orgajs is the obvious choice). A full-on literate programming engine seems like a very tough thing to engineer, but perhaps it's possible to imagine a new architecture in which there are, as you suggest, various code interpretation engines. It's an exciting idea; I wonder if it's possible to explore the possibilities in a more concrete and structured way? On Sun, May 24, 2020 at 4:20 PM rey-coyrehourcq < sebastien.rey-coyrehourcq@univ-rouen.fr> wrote: > Hi, > > Really cool discussion here. > > My two cents, Jupyter & Kernel on various langage, which have a very > large community, could be an interesting backend for org-babel on > VSCode or anyeditoryouwantusehere. > > Lot of things start to appear to collaborate online around > online/scientific cnotebook/literate programing this last year, and that > continue, for example i discover recently : > Stencila : https://github.com/stencila= > > org-babel / org-mode outside of emacs has a great potential to lead an > alternative to other markdown (RStudio / Jupyter) solution. > > Best regards > > Le dimanche 24 mai 2020 à 06:06 -0700, Jack Kamm a écrit : > > It would be very good indeed for org-babel if it could be ported to > > other editors. One of the biggest drawbacks of org-babel notebooks is > > that I can't collaborate with my colleagues on them, since I can't > > expect them to use Emacs. > > > > Aside from VSCode, I think RStudio would be an excellent target for a > > few reasons: > > > > - Literate programming is already popular among R users (see also: > > knitr, sweave, Rmarkdown) > > - There is a strong ob-R community here > > - There are some prominent Emacs users among the Rstudio developers > > (e.g. Lionel Henry, who I think is both an Rstudio and ESS > > developer) > > > > However, this would be a massive undertaking, and ultimately would > > need > > a volunteer to step up to the plate. I don't have any bandwidth to do > > this in the foreseeable future but dream of working on it one day. > > The > > biggest downside -- it would require spending considerable time > > outside > > Emacs! > > > -- > > > Sébastien Rey-Coyrehourcq > Research Engineer UMR IDEES > 02.35.14.69.30 > > {Stronger security for your email, follow EFF tutorial : > https://ssd.eff.org/} > > >