2013/4/9 Bastien <b...@gnu.org>:
> Hi James,
>
> James Harkins <jamshar...@gmail.com> writes:
>
>> ** Example header...
>> ^1   ^2          ^3 ^4
>>
>> If the point is at locations 1, 2 or 3, TAB will reveal the next level
>> of children. (The ^ locations will make sense if you format the e-mail
>> using a monospace font. A proportional font will just look
>> nonsensical.)
>>
>> ** Example header
>> *** Child node
>>
>> If it's at location 4, TAB cycling does nothing.
>
> Because with ^1 ^2 ^3 the point is on a headline, while with ^4 it is
> not on a headline, it is after the folded part of the buffer (and you
> usually don't know exactly where it is.)

May I rephrase it:  For this little gain there is too much pain (i.e.
too hard to implement)?
Thanks for the explanation, I can live without it. 8-)
--
  Dieter

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