Andre Poenitz wrote:
On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 09:11:49AM +0200, Abdelrazak Younes wrote:
Richard Heck wrote:
Andre Poenitz wrote:
I admit we haven't discussed it for a few years, mainly because last
time we reached consensus that it would be Real Kool(tm) to have but
nobody i
On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 09:11:49AM +0200, Abdelrazak Younes wrote:
> Richard Heck wrote:
>> Andre Poenitz wrote:
>>
>>> I admit we haven't discussed it for a few years, mainly because last
>>> time we reached consensus that it would be Real Kool(tm) to have but
>>> nobody implemented it.
>>>
>> Did
On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 09:11:49AM +0200, Abdelrazak Younes wrote:
> Richard Heck wrote:
> > Andre Poenitz wrote:
> >
> >> I admit we haven't discussed it for a few years, mainly because last
> >> time we reached consensus that it would be Real Kool(tm) to have but
> >> nobody implemented it.
> >>
Richard Heck wrote:
Andre Poenitz wrote:
I admit we haven't discussed it for a few years, mainly because last
time we reached consensus that it would be Real Kool(tm) to have but
nobody implemented it.
Did anyone try?
I played a bit with the drawing side once. Should not be terribly difficu
On Wed, Sep 10, 2008 at 02:49:58PM -0400, Richard Heck wrote:
>>> Would you like to have an _inline_ inset that spans more than one row ?
>>>
>>> Like:
>>>
>>> This is a line with XXX
>>> XXXXXX an inline inset.
>>
>> That
Richard wrote:
> Did anyone try? Were there problems? This would be
> particularly good with character styles
What about using the branch feature. Real cool too,
but very impractical if you use it as little notes in
the text.
Unless
Vincent
nd so?
Exactly.
Would you like to have an _inline_ inset that spans more than one row ?
Like:
This is a line with XXX
XX an inline inset.
That's called the "Three Box Model" in AL. [1]
Why the name? Where are the three boxes?
This is a line with
YY