I agree, four is as many as you need (and, I believe the most I've ever seen in a published book) -- if you think you need more, it may be because of an organizational problem.
Art Campbell art.campbell at gmail.com "... In my opinion, there's nothing in this world beats a '52 Vincent and a redheaded girl." -- Richard Thompson No disclaimers apply. DoD 358 On Wed, Jul 15, 2009 at 3:25 AM, Evanth, Henrik<Henrik.Evanth at sonyericsson.com> wrote: > Hi All > > I have an off-topic question that may or may not interest you. > > We are having a discussion at the office regarding the maximum levels of > heading that a User guide/User manual can/should contain. Do you know of any > best practice rules that define how deep a publication should/could be. > Personally I think that 6 levels is too deep for a user, but that is just a > personal preference that I cannot back up with "evidence". > > Heading 1 > ? Heading 2 > ? ? ?Heading 3 > ? ? ? ? Heading 4 > ? ? ? ? ? ?Heading 5 > ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Heading 6 > > Insights, comments or instructions are highly appreciated. > > Best Regards > /Henrik > > _______________________________________________ > > > You are currently subscribed to Framers as art.campbell at gmail.com. > > Send list messages to framers at lists.frameusers.com. > > To unsubscribe send a blank email to > framers-unsubscribe at lists.frameusers.com > or visit > http://lists.frameusers.com/mailman/options/framers/art.campbell%40gmail.com > > Send administrative questions to listadmin at frameusers.com. Visit > http://www.frameusers.com/ for more resources and info. >