On Apr 9, 2009, at 11:03 PM, Mike Newman wrote:
On Thu, 9 Apr 2009 12:33:55 +0200
Carsten Dominik wrote:
I really don't see why. Under what circumstances would you
want to mix list types like this, without at least on little
transition sentence between the lists? I cannot remember any
oc
On Apr 9, 2009, at 8:29 PM, Baoqiu Cui wrote:
Carsten Dominik writes:
Hi Baoqiu,
I really don't see why. Under what circumstances would you
want to mix list types like this, without at least on little
transition sentence between the lists? I cannot remember any
occasion when I would have
On Thu, 9 Apr 2009 12:33:55 +0200
Carsten Dominik wrote:
> I really don't see why. Under what circumstances would you
> want to mix list types like this, without at least on little
> transition sentence between the lists? I cannot remember any
> occasion when I would have wanted this to be po
Carsten Dominik writes:
> Hi Baoqiu,
>
> I really don't see why. Under what circumstances would you
> want to mix list types like this, without at least on little
> transition sentence between the lists? I cannot remember any
> occasion when I would have wanted this to be possible.
This may be
On Apr 9, 2009, at 7:27 AM, Baoqiu Cui wrote:
Carsten Dominik writes:
1. Bug One: two consecutive lists with different list types at the
same
level are exported as *one* list. For example, the following two
lists
1. Ordered List Item 1
2. Ordered List Item 2
- Itemized List Item 1
-
Hi Leo,
Leo writes:
1. Ordered List Item 1
2. Ordered List Item 2
- Itemized List Item 1
- Itemized List Item 2
- Itemized List Item 3
> mixing lists is easy to do. Just use Alt + to
> decrease/increase the item's indentation.
Increasing the indentation
On 2009-04-09 06:27 +0100, Baoqiu Cui wrote:
>>> level are exported as *one* list. For example, the following two
>>> lists
>>>
>>> 1. Ordered List Item 1
>>> 2. Ordered List Item 2
>>>
>>> - Itemized List Item 1
>>> - Itemized List Item 2
>>> - Itemized List Item 3
>>
>> This is, ac
Carsten Dominik writes:
>> 1. Bug One: two consecutive lists with different list types at the
>> same
>> level are exported as *one* list. For example, the following two
>> lists
>>
>> 1. Ordered List Item 1
>> 2. Ordered List Item 2
>>
>> - Itemized List Item 1
>> - Itemized List It