Luis Ferro wrote:
If one uses start-indent="3mm" end-indent="3mm" in the fo:region-body, those
attributes are ignored by all the content placed in the section, when i
presume, they should be propagated as "default" indentation for all child
containers of it...
Ok... to sum up... there is no way of defining a bleed with a "tinted"
page...
1. placing a background color on the page definition is ignored and not
painted (so no "default" tinting of the whole page);
You can put the same background-color on each of the regions defined for
the page.
2. is not possible to add padding in the body region (so, one can't define a
body that covers the whole page BUT that its content actually only use part
of it);
You can specify margins on the body region.
3. placing indentation for the content of the body is ignored (equivalent of
point 2);
4. the region-start and region-end overlap the region-before and
region-after (and don't accept either the margin-top attribute - they ignore
it).
You can use the precedence attribute to control how the side regions
interact.
So... it is impossible to make a conditional definition of pages that need
to have a background color painted... (unless there is any other way of
doing it that i can't think of at the moment...).
I don't quite understand what your objective is.
Chris
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