Understood. But my understanding of the docs is that it shouldn't do
that in the first place.

On Thu, May 21, 2015 at 2:15 PM, Ben Lerner <bler...@ccs.neu.edu> wrote:
> Probably a CSS fix: assuming you have something like this in your CSS
> preamble
>
> div.question { padding-left: 2em; }
>
> to cause the indentation, then something like this will disable the nested
> one:
>
> div.exercise > div.question { padding-left: 0em; }
>
> ~ben
>
> On 5/21/2015 2:12 PM, Shriram Krishnamurthi wrote:
>
> Thanks for these replies. Sorry I'm only now getting to them: Google failed
> to notify me of them.
>
> The problem with using (nested ...) is that it indents its content even when
> I don't use the 'inset style. Therefore, if I have (as I do)
>
> @exercise{@question{...}}
>
> everything in the exercise ends up nested one level, and the question ends
> up nested two levels. That's why I rejected the use of `nested` and was
> looking for alternate solutions.
>
> How can I get `nested` to not indent? I have exactly what you suggested:
>
> (define (exercise . t) (nested #:style question-style t))
> (define (question . t)  (nested #:style question-style t))
>
> where
>
> (define exercise-style (make-style "exercise" null))
> (define question-style (make-style "question" null))
>
> and this still leads to the indentation.
>

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