https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=141452
--- Comment #23 from Eyal Rozenberg <[email protected]> --- (In reply to Mike Kaganski from comment #21) > I strongly believe this proposal should be done, and tdf#104151 was badly > misguided. So, it seems I'm in rare agreement withe Mike on something :-) > We have multiple confusion here. ... We have currently just a mess. Yes, and even when a user figures things out, it's not that they create coherent notions in their mind; they're still in a situation of "I have to memorize semi-equivalences on not-intuitively-equivalent concepts, and what-term-applies-where-and-how". > Outline is the concept that should be used when the structure (including > chapters and sections, and applied by the levels in paragraphs) is meant. It > also must be used in Navigator instead of the "Headings". Well, either instead of, or separately from, but yes. > Chapter is only used when first outline level is used (as in ToC's Create > Index or Table of Contents For - note how the Chapter used there is > *different* in the meaning from what tdf#104151 assigned it to). and there isn't a good enough indication that Heading 1 is supposed to be equivalent to Chapter; nor, in fact, is that a good idea. Most documents people write don't have Chapters anyway. > Heading should be used very carefully - to refer to paragraphs having > outline level applied; Here we disagree. "Heading" means "paragraph with Heading/Heading N" styles. That's how the lay user understands it. Paragraph with outline level can be called something involving the word outline: "Outlines", "Outlined", "Outlined paragraphs" or whatever. > and also to refer to Heading N paragraph style - but > these two uses must be disambiguated in writing. So, my disagreement above is how I suggest disambiguate. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.
