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Re: Is the cascading logic of outlines a feature, or a design bug?
From: |
Greg Minshall |
Subject: |
Re: Is the cascading logic of outlines a feature, or a design bug? |
Date: |
Wed, 28 Dec 2022 11:45:16 +0300 |
Stefan,
i am agnostic about this. but, ...
> But also semantically I would say it is a feature. Have you ever seen
> a book, longer web page, or even article (with multiple sections) that
> tries to close one section and continue any previous sibling or its
> parent?
one sometimes see "sub-sections" indented from the main flow. at the
end of the sub-section, the indentation reverts to that of the main
flow. in the case of one level, this works fairly well (the case where
the end of the sub-section corresponds to the end of a "physical" page
is one place it works less well).
also, one *could* consider "boxes" (e.g., in textbooks) something like
this, though they tend to exist outside the main flow.
cheers, Greg
- Re: Is the cascading logic of outlines a feature, or a design bug?, (continued)
- Re: Is the cascading logic of outlines a feature, or a design bug?, tomas, 2022/12/27
- Re: Is the cascading logic of outlines a feature, or a design bug?, Marcin Borkowski, 2022/12/28
- Re: Is the cascading logic of outlines a feature, or a design bug?, Heinz Tuechler, 2022/12/28
- Re: Is the cascading logic of outlines a feature, or a design bug?, tomas, 2022/12/28
Re: Is the cascading logic of outlines a feature, or a design bug?, Max Nikulin, 2022/12/26
Re: Is the cascading logic of outlines a feature, or a design bug?, Stefan Nobis, 2022/12/28
Re: Is the cascading logic of outlines a feature, or a design bug?, tomas, 2022/12/28