Andre Poenitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

| On Fri, Oct 10, 2003 at 02:38:03PM +0100, Jose' Matos wrote:
>>   Ok.
>> 
>>   Tables are composed by rows and columns. The intersection between rows and 
>> columns is a cell. (ok, you can have cells spanning several columns, and it 
>> would be great if they could span also several rows, but you get the 
>> picture).
>> 
>>   The next question is: what is the allowed content inside a cell? Or in terms 
>> of html parlance inlines (think of <span></span>) or block elements 
>> (<div></div>).
>> 
>>   If we have a simple cell, a cell without any fancy stuff like fixed lenght, 
>> then only inline elements are allowed. But now we get a problem, because the 
>> inset text (lyx parlance) has a style for its paragraph, but here it does not 
>> make sense to speak about a paragraph, so this option is closed.
>> 
>>   Is this more reasonable? ;-)
>
| A bit.
>
| Well, my take is that there should be only insets and plain text.
| Nothing else. Most notably, 'layouts' will be 'inset styles' in this
| world...

You are dreaming again. We need to focus on what we have now, and how
to make that work, prefferably in a stable way.

-- 
        Lgb

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