John Kaufmann wrote:
A few days ago I asked how, in the OO worldview, one should properly
separate paragraphs ("Newline between paragraphs" - the answer was
No). After thinking about the consequences, I followed with a thread
("Line break and justification withing paragraph?"} that tried to ask
a practical question [that is holding up a paper I'm writing]. That
question received no answers, probably because I (a) asked it poorly
and (b) embedded it in a (verbose) question about design philosophy.
May I try again? [My paper is waiting. ;-)]
This is a common issue, seen all the time, especially in procedural
documents like service manuals: A paragraph with an embedded list.
The first few sentences of the paragraph describe the list, and then
the elements are listed. One would like to treat this, spatially and
conceptually, as a single paragraph.
For such purposes Writer provides the intra-paragraph line break
(Shift+Enter), which breaks the line without invoking the
inter-paragraph spacing. But there is (at least) one problem: It
can't be used with "Justified" paragraph alignment. How can this be
handled?
John
Most of your question is above my knowledge, but I do know that you can
mark a few lines and parts of a line, and then format the marked text
such as bolding, underlining, etc. Presumably this facility would
extend to justification. Or, do I not understand your question?
Joe Conner, Poulsbo, WA USA
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