On Thu, 16 Apr 2009, Manoj Srivastava wrote:
Any script should be able to take the top 4 symbols currently used, and be able to detect them. I think *, +, - and o cover most packages, and the scripts in question can be readily expanded. All kinds of markup languages already do something similar. (markdown, Emacs org-mode, mediawiki, etc)
Perhaps you missed the point that it is not only the very character which is used but also the broken spacing which prevents scripts from detecting levels of itemizing list. Yes, we have more than one level itemizings in our descriptions (see my initial posting. Detecting these would need either a defined character or a defined spacing (IMHO an 'and' would be better than a non-exclusive 'or' here).
I find the descriptions on packages.d.o just fine right now.
IMHO it is no argument that a specific person is happy with the layout everybody else is. If a text has a certain logic it should to be supported by the means a certain output style has. HTML can express a list and so it should if we want to express lists.
Having sad that, I would not be averse to specifying that leading white space and *, +, and - would be acceptable as bullet marks (I thought specifying which mark at which level was overspecification).
So you would be in favour of specifying only the amount of white space to define a level? If this might be accepted as a rough consensus it is at least helpful to enable tools detecting what they need to detect. Even if my esthetical feeling goes beyond this I can accept this. But you also specified three characters (*, +, and -) so do you want to restrict the acceptable set yourself (for instance not accept 'o')? Kind regards Andreas. -- http://fam-tille.de -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org