PLEASE REMOVE THIS ADDRESS FROM ALL YOUR LISTINGS - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Kind Regards, Accounts - Micro 2000 Tel: +44 (0)1342 301 001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.micro2000.co.uk Micro2000 is a trading name of Micro 2000 (London) Ltd. Company Registration Number - 3365206 - VAT Registration Number - 699 9209 55 Registered Office: Greenstede House, Wood Street, East Grinstead, West Sussex, RH19 1UZ -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 01 August 2008 10:09 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [discuss] Sub points Hi, André Schnabel wrote: > Hi, > > Devakrit Bagchi schrieb: >> Consider the following example of insertion of points - 1.)Master >> point >> a.)Sub points >> b.) >> c.) >> Now i wanna insert this text in the master point...there is not >> way to do it! >> > > Type your Master point and apply the numbering style you want. > Presse Return followed by tab - this will give you a subpoint with > numbering. > Type your subpoints. > When c) is finished (be aware that you neet to have some text for c) ) > Press Alt+Return followed by Shift+Tab. This will give you a paragraph > without numbering symbol and decrease the level by one. > > You can also to this using the Numbering and Bullets toolbar. > > André > > Yes, that is the right way to do it. some technical background: The Alt+Return creates a new paragraph still belonging to the list, but its list label is switch off. Thus, you can combine several paragraphs into one list item. The term list item comes from the ODF specification. A list item can contain several paragraphs and sub lists. The sub lists usually contain the list items for the sub points. Only the first paragraph of a list item gets a list label. The other paragraphs belong to this list item. If your already have 3 list items. E.g.: 1. ABC 2. DEF 3. GHI You can join (e.g.) the first and second list item into one, by placing the cursor before the "D" and hit Backspace. You will see the list label "2." will vanish and list label "3." will change to "2.": 1. ABC DEF 2. GHI Now, the first list item contains two paragraphs - "ABC" and "DEF". The resulting pseudo ODF structure will look like: <list> <list-item> <paragraph>ABC</paragraph> <paragraph>DEF</paragraph> </list-item> <list-item> <paragraph>GHI</paragraph> </list-item> </list> Regards, Oliver. -- ======================================================================= Oliver-Rainer Wittmann (od) - OpenOffice.org Writer OpenOffice.org Engineering at Sun: http://blogs.sun.com/GullFOSS --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
