Which brings up another question.  Alt-A return?  How could I have
discovered this?  If I look at Help/Shortcuts, I don't see it (or am I
blind?)

I wish lyx had a way to discover things like emacs does.


On Wed, May 7, 2014 at 11:38 AM, Neal Becker <ndbeck...@gmail.com> wrote:

> After arrow right, return.
> I can type some text.  Looks nice.  Oh, it's not nested in the frame.  Hit
> tab.
>
> Now you have Frame inside Frame.
>
>
> On Wed, May 7, 2014 at 11:31 AM, Jürgen Spitzmüller <sp...@lyx.org> wrote:
>
>> 2014-05-07 17:14 GMT+02:00 Neal Becker:
>>
>>>  OK, I'm confused here.  Let's consider workflow to make a bullet chart.
>>>
>>
>> I was talking about the Standard paragraph, not Itemize.
>>
>>
>>> Insert sep.  Hit return.
>>> Select Frame
>>> Fill in Title
>>> oops - return in title does nothing, navigate past title (right arrow),
>>> hit
>>> return
>>>
>>
>> Easier:
>>
>> Alt-A Return
>> Fill in title
>> Arrow right
>> Return
>>
>>
>>> Now I'm in Frame.  Certainly not what I want - I don't even know what
>>> this frame
>>> in a frame would do.
>>>
>>
>> I do not understand what you mean by "Frame in a frame". You are still in
>> the same frame. Would you also say "Quotation in a quotation" if the style
>> still is called "quotation" after hitting return? Or "Itemize in an
>> itemize"? Or "Theorem in a Theorem"? Or, for that matter, "Standard in
>> Standard"?
>>
>>
>>> Switch to itemize
>>> Use mouse to hit -> icon to nest itemize within frame.
>>>
>>
>> Yes. The same as you need to do when using itemize in an Example box, or
>> Quotation, or Theorem, or ...
>>
>> Jürgen
>>
>
>

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