James Harkins <jamshar...@gmail.com> writes: > Btw, *who* preferred \alert? (Orwell, Politics and the English Language: > "Never use the passive [voice] where you can use the active.")
I prefer alert. See the Beamer manual (texdoc beamer in texlive) on change of style and how to use alert (e.g. alert on one particular (sub)slide of a "multipage slide"). It's the Beamer way. Surely it cannot be a bad thing? > Still, I wonder if there is a way to make the new backend less unfriendly > toward lists. It's an interesting philosophical question: In what cases is > it better for the tool to adapt to the users' wishes, versus cases where > the tool should encourage (Are blocks in the result actually better than > lists? Who says so, and why should I take his or her word for it?) Org has many dedicated list symbols namely white space and one of {[-+*], [0-9][.)]}. Why should a headline be converted to a list? It was always awkward to me. I don't know how hard it would be to make the "default" block (of level 3, say) a list block, but I guess that's ultimately what you want? Such a behavior shouldn't be the default, IMO, since a headline is not a list. > "Reasonably" for me would mean tweaking some configuration options and > perhaps changing a few minor details of the markup. If you have to change > the org document's structure (e.g., converting headlines to lists), it > isn't backward compatible. I'm sure it would be relatively quick to hack together a couple of regexps and some lisp to do the conversion if you prefer to use the new exporter. E.g. find every occurrence of * in the beginning of the line of length X and convert each occurrence to "-" with appropriate white space (e.g. X + N). What might be useful would be a tag telling Org to use the legacy exporter on a file basis, although it would also be a short run solution. –Rasmus -- Summon the Mothership!