183 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
183 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1365
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Title: HPR1365: LibreOffice 14 Writer A Numbered List Style Deconstructed
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1365/hpr1365.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 00:18:38
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---
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Hello, this is Ahuka. Welcome to another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio and our ongoing
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series on Libre Office Writer. And I want to pick up from where we left off last time
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when we took a part of bullet list and saw the various things that make it tick. Now, you
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know, understanding how to handle lists, both in terms of the structure and the appearance
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can be a little bit tricky. And that's why we're taking the time to deconstruct these things
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because when you understand what all of the pieces are, it really helps. And as I said
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before, I had this encounter with the gentleman at Ohio Linux Fast and it had exactly to do with
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these list styles. And it was, you know, why can't I get things to line up the way I want and I was
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able to say, well, because you're not taking a look at the styles. As I've said over and over again,
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you know, if you're just clicking buttons, you know, you're looking at the top of the screen and
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you see some buttons up there and you, well, just click this button and get what I want. In the long
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run, you're just going to make your life a whole lot more miserable. You really need to do this
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with styles. So this time, what we want to do is we want to take a look at a numbered list
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style and take a part of the components of that and see how that works. Now, a little note
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up front, we're going to be talking about how you can change the settings. If you are working with
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one of the built-in styles, you might want to make a copy of it first and experiment with your
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copy instead of experimenting with the original. It's up to you. You're all adults out there. But if
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you go to the very last icon on row two of the styles and formatting window, that's the one
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that says create a new style based on the selection. So click on one of these styles, then go to
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that icon and create a new one. Create several, you know, start playing around, see what the difference
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is. And that way your original is preserved. In fact, a really good technique is to make a copy of
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it and make a modification and put that into the name of the style itself. So, you know, this will
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be one with a different numbering scheme. This will be one where I've shifted the alignment
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stuff like that. Then you can go through and you can see how each of these things affects
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what's going on. You know, if you take a little time to learn this, it's going to make your life a
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lot easier. So, we're going to take a numbered list. So, why is that different from a bullet list?
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Well, many of the options really are the same. But there are some different ones because numbered
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lists have something bullet lists don't have. Bullet lists are just collections of items.
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There's no particular order. So, imagine a shopping list. You've got to pick up milk eggs and
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bread at the store. You know, it doesn't matter whether milk is number one, number two, or number three
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on your list. Here's all the stuff I'm going to get when I go to the store. So, there's no order
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there. In a numbered list, order is important. And that's a good way to decide which kind of list
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you need to use. If the order doesn't matter, then what you want is a bullet list. If the order
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is important, and a good example of that is a set of directions. So, we all know driving directions,
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for instance. Imagine that someone gives you directions and says you go three miles east on this
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road. Then you turn right, go another two miles, then turn left, go another mile, and stop.
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Now, you'll only get where you're going. If you follow these steps in this exact order,
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if you mix them up, I don't know where you're going to end up, but it's not going to be the destination
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you were looking for. So, let's take, in this case, numbering one as an example. All right? And so,
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if you want to just look at what's in numbering one, we can go ahead and do that. You just right
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click choose modify, because that's how you get the style configuration window. As I said before,
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if you want to experiment, then first create a copy based on this and do your experimenting with
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the copy. So, anyway, if you get the style configuration window open, you're going to have a lot
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of the same tabs that you had before. Organizer bullets, numbering style, outline, graphics,
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position options, very, very similar. Now, the organizer tab, if you're working with a built-in
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style, that's all going to be grayed out because the built-in styles, there's nothing you can do
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in the organizer tab. There's no configurable options, in other words, for built-in styles. If you
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create your own style, you're going to have some options there. The bullets tab, not really going
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to do anything for you if you're on a numbered list. And pretty much the same for the graphics tab,
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because the graphics tab was just putting in fancy graphics to use for your bullets. So, we take,
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we eliminate those from the discussion, and what are we left with? Well, the first place that we're
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going to be looking is numbering style. Now, this is a selection of styles that you can apply to
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your numbered list. You've got lots, you've got Arabic numerals, Roman numerals, periods and parentheses,
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upper and lower case letters, and all sorts of combinations. So, the very first one is Arabic numerals
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where the number is followed by a right parentheses. Second one is the same Arabic numerals where the
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numbers are followed by a period. Third one, the same Arabic numerals, but now you've got left and
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right parentheses around each of the numbers. Fourth one, we're now into Roman numerals followed by a
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period. Then, on the second row, we've got capital letters, ab and c, each followed by a right
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parentheses. Next, we've got lower case letters, ab, c, all followed by a right parentheses.
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And the next one after that is lower case letters with parentheses around the letters.
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And then, the last one is lower case Roman numerals, followed by periods. So, you see, you got a
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lot of stuff here. Now, these are just the ones that are built in. You can make style changes,
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which we can take a look at a little bit later on, but so here's a selection of styles. And these
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are the most common ones that you could apply to your numbered list. So, if we were taking a look at
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numbering one from the list of built-in styles, that's equivalent to the second selection up top,
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which is the Arabic numerals followed by a period. So, if you were experimenting and wanted to go
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back to where you were, if you just clicked on that, you would do it. And when you click on one of
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these styles, you will see that it has a thick black border that appears around that square.
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And that's how you know that it's the one that's selected, and then you can just click apply,
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and it will be applied to the style and applied to the element you're working on.
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So, that's numbering style. The next tab is outline. Now, outlining is a topic in itself. So,
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I'm not really going to get it into it in this. We're actually going to have a whole separate lesson
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on outlining. Now, the next tab that I want to look at then is position.
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That's works in much the same way as with bullet lists, but let's go over it again. This was where
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the fellow at Ohio Linux Fest was getting confused. So, what's happening here?
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By design, all lists are meant to be used as a hierarchy when needed, which means that they function
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somewhat like an outline in that you have main list items in level one, sublists in level two,
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and so on. Now, Libre Office Writer gives you up to 10 levels you can control.
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But for now, let's just look at level one, and then we'll see what happens with the others.
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If you click on the one in the level field, you will see the built-in settings for the level one
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of this style. The first setting is numbering followed by, and it is set to tab stop.
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And that means there is a tab setting for where the actual text will start on each list item.
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The other options are space and nothing. If you select space, you get a single blank space between
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the numbering and the text. So, let's think about what this means. We know we're in numbering one,
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and numbering one has the number itself, the Arabic numeral, followed by a period, followed by
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what? Well, if it was a tab stop, it would be the number, the numeral, let us say, followed by a
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period, and then it would jump to wherever the tab stop setting was. If it's a space, you would have
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the numeral, a period, a blank space, and then the text would begin. Now, the other option you have
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is nothing, and then you would just have the numeral, a period, and the text immediately. Not sure
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when I would want to use that. I think tab really is the best, and clearly so do the Libra
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Office developers, since that's the one they chose as the default. This makes sense when you
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start thinking, what happens if you have a long list that goes to double digits? If you used either
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space or nothing, when you get to the number 10, all of your text would be shifted over because of
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the added numeral. And if you had a proportional font, you would see things shifted over by slightly
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varying amounts. With tab, everything lines up just right. This matters even more if you use Roman
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numerals because the Roman numerals take up, one is i, two is i, i, three is i, i, i, and then four is
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i, v, and none of these have the same amount of space in them. If you use Roman numerals, that
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tab setting is really important, and you might need to add a little extra space into the tab, okay?
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So, the default for the tab stop is on my machine, two tenths of an inch, point two zero inches.
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Now, I'm in the United States. We're a backward country that has not yet adopted the metric system.
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So, I have everything set in inches. Two tenths of an inch is a little less than a centimeter,
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because I think a centimeter is roughly a third of an inch. And I'm just doing rough
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comparisons here. Or in other words, it's roughly three centimeters to the inch.
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So, anyway, this minus set at two tenths of an inch, but two tenths of an inch, what?
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It's calculated from the left margin. Now, in a way, that's good, because it gives you
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a standard that doesn't change. You know, imagine you had a tab that went from wherever you
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finished the number. It doesn't get you very far. So, by doing it from the left margin,
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that means everything lines up exactly, but two tenths of an inch from the left margin,
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may mean that the text starts very close to the numbers, particularly if your numbers start to
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get larger. That's where my friend at Ohio Linux Fest got in trouble, because he didn't understand
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that. And so, if you were using the style, you would simply go into the style and say,
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you know, make it three tenths of an inch, make it, you know, one and a half centimeters,
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or whatever is going to work for you to create that amount of space, but measured from the left
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margin. And if you do that right, you're going to have everything just line up perfectly.
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Now, the next thing is numbering alignment. And numbering alignment is also relative to the left
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margin, and it works with the aligned at that is just under it. So, my default
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says numbering alignment left aligned at zero, 0.00 inches. So, what does that mean?
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So, if you click on each level at succession, you can clearly see what it works.
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Aligned at is the offset to the margin. At 0.00 inches, it's not offset at all. But if you start
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clicking on each of these levels in succession, you see that, well, level two is aligned at
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point two inches, which means it will start at two tenths of an inch from the left margin.
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Level three is aligned at point three nine inches, level four at point five nine inches,
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and so on. So, in other words, each level is indented by around a fifth of an inch compared to
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the level above it. Now, if your list not have a lot of levels, you could increase these offsets
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if you wanted to, and that would put a little more white space into what you're doing.
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Again, if you are in a civilized country, this will be in centimeters instead of inches.
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Alignment determines where the left margin is relative to the numbering. As we saw with bullets,
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this could be counterintuitive a little bit, because we're used to left and right align in other
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places, and it means something different. If it is left aligned, that means the left margin
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is on the left of the numbering. So, if you've got a number one, you say just to the left of that
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number one will be the left margin of the page. So, that's a left aligned. Now, if you had selected
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center, what that would mean is that the left margin would run right through the center of your number.
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Somewhat different kind of thing. And if you had chosen right, and this is the really counterintuitive
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part, because if you choose right alignment, it shifts everything over to the left, and this
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confuses people. But what that really means is, if you take a look at your number, the left
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margin will be just to the right of the number. Take a look at some of those. You'll start to get
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the idea. So, with right aligns, the left margin comes after your number, unless there is an offset.
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But in other words, the offset is from wherever the alignment has set it.
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Now, the last of the position settings is for indent. Where do you indent?
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And what this refers to is what happens. If your list item is more than one line long.
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So, imagine that you're typing along, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, and it jumps to the next
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line, because you've ran out of space on line one. Where does line two start? I've always thought
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you want line two to start exactly the same place the text of line one started.
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And you will get that every time, if you're indent and your tab stop are the same, because again,
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this is measured from the left margin. So, if your tab stop was two tenths of an inch, make your
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indent two tenths of an inch. Then everything lines up absolutely perfectly.
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So, maybe there's some situation where you don't want that to happen. I have trouble imagining
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a situation where that really looks terribly good if the first line and the subsequent lines
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don't match up. I mean, there can be situations. There are things like hanging paragraphs and things
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like that where people do interesting things, but my feeling is with most list items, you really
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want those to line up. So, that is the deconstruction of a numbered list, and I think we've accomplished
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a few good things here today. I just got some very exciting news. There is a fellow named Bruce
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Byfield, and I don't know if I've specifically mentioned him here before. I may well have because
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he's one of the gurus in this area, and someone I follow very closely, and he just signed a contract
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to do a book on Libra Office, and it's not just any old book, it's called Libra Office
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Styles and Templates. You can tell from a title like that that this is going to be great.
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Bruce is basically going to be writing this book from exactly the same standpoint that I've
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been doing this series, which is that you use Styles and Templates to control what you're doing,
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and that's how you really get all the power out of this. I don't know how long it's going to take
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him to write the book, so maybe we're six or eight months away from anything appearing, but
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it's something to keep an eye on, and when I have more news, you know I will definitely pass it
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along to the community here at Hacker Public Radio, because I know from people who have talked to me
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that there are a lot of people who really enjoy this Libra Office series and want to get more
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of this good information. So that's just something to look forward to. Bruce is one of the gurus I
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learned from, so I think it's going to be a great book. So with that I'm going to sign off,
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and as always I'm going to say please, please, please support free software. Thank you, goodbye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, or at Hacker Public Radio, those are
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