>Well, OK, but:
>
>1.  Props is non-intuitive, especially for our favorite target client.
>(You know, the church secretary.)  (And, for me.)

Umm... well, it really doesn't matter at all what we call it. The church 
secretary should *never* be hand-editing the document or using something 
like XSLT to do transformations. As for developers, well, I don't see what 
the big deal is.

>2. I don't think CSS invented "styles" -- I don't think Word did either,
>but I think they've been using "styles" since Word 3 (1983?), or
>earlier.

Following precedent. This is a better argument. If we're going to change, we 
need to change it _now_.

FYI, Word styles are like our styles, not our "props" attributes. i.e. a 
style is a set of predefined attributes inherited by any element. MSWord 
uses PAP and CHP binary structures (actually, groups of diffs to these 
structures - GRPPLs of PAPXs and CHPXs) to store what we currently call 
"props".

Dom
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