Thanks for the suggections...
The answer was to use "Change Environment depth".
robin wrote:
> Rich Shepard wrote:
>
>> On Sat, 7 Sep 2002, Craig Morehouse wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>> I haven't been able to grasp what I need to do to nest lists inside
>>> of lists, or enumerations inside of Lists, or lists inside of
>>> enumerations, etc..
>>>
>>> What am I missing?
>>>
>>
>>
>> The trial-and-error experience I gained. :-)
>>
>> Block the group that you want nested and apply the command to those
>> alone.
If you do this, it doesn't indent them and it interrupts the sequence.
cahnging the Depth was the answer.
>> I don't have LyX running at the moment, and it's been a while since I did
>> this, but the key is to block each sub-list and nest them individually.
>> Boring and not terribly efficient, but there it is.
>>
> No worse than trying to do the same thing in a word processor that
> insists on trying to "correct" what you've just painstakingly done ;-)
>
Ain't THAT a fact..
> Robin
>
--
Elisp 3:51
"He who disregards the Only True Editor or His Documentation strays far
indeed."
(setq load-path (cons (expand-file-name "~/XEmacs_Rules!/") load-path))