https://bz.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=126902
[email protected] changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |[email protected] --- Comment #32 from [email protected] --- This same behavior can also be replicated using the following steps: 1. Open the attachment named "Example document" (second attachment from the top, after "After the bug is experienced"). 2. Notice how wide each of the words "TEXT" are (about 1/2 inch). 3. Click on an edge of the second frame so that you can resize it. 4. Resize the second frame such that it is over 1/2 inch narrower (horizontally). 5. Observe the second frame being crammed onto the first page. Here, I have replicated this behavior without modifying the margins. Hence, changing the margins from Normal to Narrow is not the cause of the second frame being crammed onto the first page. What matters here is that the second frame fits within the margins alongside the other text on the first page. Meanwhile, continuing from step 5, I can cause the second frame to move back to the second page by modifying the text slightly, then when I undo that modification the frame stays on the second page. That is, I follow these steps (continuing from step 5): 6. Place your cursor in one of the occurrences of the word "TEXT". 7. Add characters to that word. (For example, change the word from "TEXT" to "TEXTTEXTTEXTTEXT".) 8. Observe that as soon as the word is too long to fit next to the second frame, the second frame moves down to the second page. 9. Press Ctrl+Z to undo the changes you made in step 7. The word you modified should have been changed back to "TEXT". 10. Notice that the second frame is still on the second page. If you'd like to move the second frame back to the first page (continuing from step 10): 11. Place your cursor next to one of the occurrences of the word "TEXT". 12. Press Enter. The frame will be moved up again. Modifying the margins should not be the concern here. What should be the concern is that the second frame behaves inconsistently depending on a previous state of the document, even if all the other content in the current state is the same. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the issue.
