Title: | DOCUMENT T1.0 |
Notice: | **New notesfile (DOCUMENT.NOTE) now available (see note 897)** |
Moderator: | CLOSET::ADLER |
Created: | Mon Feb 09 1987 |
Last Modified: | Thu Oct 31 1991 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 897 |
Total number of notes: | 4397 |
I have a note containing a list, and the formatter seems to forget where the note's left margin was following the list. The right margin works ok, but text following the list is flush with the regular body text left margin, instead of the note left margin. The typeface is still the note bold typeface. This was observed with the GENERAL doctype. I haven't tried other doctypes. For example, <NOTE> <P>Some text in the note. <LIST>(UNNUMBERED) <LE>Item 1 <P>Item 1 text. <LE>Item 2 <P>Item 2 text. <ENDLIST> This line appears in the bold typeface of the note, but is flush with the regular (non-note) text. <ENDNOTE> I realize I neglected to put a <P> or <CP> tag before the final line, but I don't think that should violate the left margin. I will try tagging that line to see if the problem persists.
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
192.1 | CUPOLA::HAKKARAINEN | Albatross! | Fri Apr 03 1987 10:06 | 7 | |
The paragraph tag is indeed essential. Document doesn't presume what's going to follow the termination of the list. So, results are unpredictable if the <p> or <cp> is missing. It might be helpful to remember that we're tagging these elements to identify what they are. Without such a tag, Document won't know what to do with what it's got. | |||||
192.2 | SARAH::P_DAVIS | Peter Davis, X-NYer | Fri Apr 03 1987 11:40 | 4 | |
Adding the <P> tag did indeed solve the problem, but I don't understand why document would forget the left (but not the right margin). It seems to me that until <ENDNOTE> is encountered, nothing should go outside the note margins. | |||||
192.3 | still needs context | CLOSET::ANKLAM | Sun Apr 05 1987 13:46 | 8 | |
It's not a matter of setting/remembering margins. It's a matter of specifying what the text element is. Without the <p> tag, the sentence is just a random series of letters, and there's no context to put it in. patti anklam |