All of this is not handled by Mnemosyne directly, but rather by Qt. So, this
is more a question about html than it is about Mnemosyne.
Perhaps some html guru here has a solution?
Peter
On Tuesday 30 December 2008 04:22:44 Bill Powell wrote:
Hi! First off, thanks for Mnemosyne -- a splendid
Peter,
Thanks very much for your quick response!
It turns out there is a fairly simple workaround. I searched on
saxparseexception and nbsp,
and found this is a known issue with XSLT. Fortunately, it's easy to
use
#160;
instead of
nbsp;
I find that three spaces makes a comfortable indent.