https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=150565
--- Comment #2 from Telesto <[email protected]> --- (In reply to Heiko Tietze from comment #1) I made a mistake when reporting the bug, causing the different end-result. The report is wrong.. Still something fishy is going on: 1. Right Click Modify Landscape in Sidebar -> Styles Deck -> Page Styles & open Page Tab 2. Press OK (without touching anything) 3. Format -> Page Styles -> Page Deck -> Change the page size to A5 4. Right Click Modify Landscape in Sidebar -> Styles Deck -> Page Styles & open Page Tab. Notice A4.. So closing the dialog with OK makes A4 explicit, not inherited. > If I change the PgS via the main menu (Format > Page Style => > .uno:PageDialog) it affects all PgS (eg. Default PgS and Landscape) True. The expected part is something which debated about. It depends what to expect. The Page Styles panel has no visual hierarchy in contrast too Paragraph Styles. So should Landscape inheriting settings from Default Page Style? With a flat list, I would say NO. But however there is some bug about hierarchical page styles, I think? You currently can't create those manually.. So there might be a mismatch the ideal/ desired state (soll), and the actually state (ist). Current mixing two concepts. > while applying a different attribute to the *current* PgS via > sidebar > Page doesn't (also expected). This isn't the case. Sidebar > Page does modify the Default Page Style. And indirectly Landscape Page Style. So Page Tab in sidebar regarding to at least for 'Format' is exactly the same as Format -> Page Style -> Page Tab It isn't obvious that you're actually modifying the current applied page style, when working with the Page Tab. It doesn't even show which page style you're modifying :-( So if you have Page with Landscape page style, and go to Sidebar Page Tab and change orientation to Portrait, you're actually setting Page Style Landscape to Portrait. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.
