This functionality were not at all apparent to me as it were described in those
sources I found before I asked here. And now I managed to find out how to link
this style to the text. Which for those who wounder is to set the numbering
style to Numbering 1 on the Numbering tab in the paragraph dialog for whatever
paragraph style you use with your lists.
Thank you Dan
Dan Lewis wrote:
On Thursday 03 November 2005 03:15 pm, Roger Norling wrote:
I might not have been correctly clear. Your solution works independantly
for each list. What I meant were the lack of some kind of setting somewhere
that let me setup how each new list I create will be formated from the
beginning. I can not mark the whole text and set the list indention either
of course, because that would turn the whole text into one big list.
Dan Lewis wrote:
On Thursday 03 November 2005 10:35 am, Roger Norling wrote:
Hello
Hopefuly I have sent this mail to the right adress. If not, please direct
me to the right adress and/or relay this mail to the right person.
I have been using the windows version of openoffice for a while, but with
the migration to the 2.0 version I ran into a tiny, but oh so irritating,
problem.
Before version 2.0 the first level of bullet or numbered lists had no
indention, the second one half centimeter and so on. In 2.0 all levels
are indented in the same style as Microsoft Word. I prefer the style
where the first level have no indention.
I have looked through forums and the openoffice help file without
anything indicating that this can be changed globaly in the whole file.
I finaly found that the button labled default can be used to set the
indention to the values used in the pre 2.0 versions. This seems like a
bad joke to me, because it basicly say that I need to change all lists
individialy, clicking "that xxxx button" every time.
So unless you can show me some feature I have overlooked, not counting
the use of numbering styles which work but aren't quite the same thing,
I would like to suggest this feature to change list indention globaly in
some future version.
Sincerly
Roger Norling
Format > Bullets & Numbering > Position (tab)
Click "1-10" in the Level list to highlight it.
Check (tick) "Relative"
Click the Default button. (This gives you the 0.50 cm reading.)
Click OK.
This should do it. The trick is to set the Default values by
selection all ten levels which you did by highlighting "1-10" in the
Level list.
Dan
Let me try again. Follow the steps that I outlined above to set the type
of number outlining you want. When the cursor is where you want to begin a
numbered list, use the F11 key to open the Styles and Formating window. Click
the List Styles icon (to the left of the paint can). Double click this named
style: Numbering 1. This should place the "number" you want where the cursor
was. It will also open a toolbar in the upper part of the OOo window. If the
"number" that appears is a continuation of the last numbered list, click the
icon that has two Roman numeral (I & II) with a red arrow pointing up from
the II to the I. (This is the Start Numbering icon.) Clicking it once will
start the numbering again.
This information is probably in the Getting Started Guide available at:
http://documentation.openoffice.org/manuals/index.html. The specific chapter
you want is Introduction to Styles.
Dan
Dan
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