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On Mon, Aug 6, 2012 at 1:14 PM, Daniel Mania <daniel.mania@umb.no> wrote:

Hei hei!

Some time ago I filed a bug report (ID 46517) about LibreOffice's
subscript/superscript behavior. This report got closed and I would like to
discuss it here instead and also expand it to formatting in general.

Currently, if the user activates any formatting (e.g. "Text bold"), the
outcome depends on the cursor position:

a)
If the cursor is "inside" a word (behind first character and in front of
last character), the whole word will be formatted (even though it is
unmarked).

b)
If the cursor is anywhere else, only newly typed characters will be
formatted.


This is another example of how LibreOffice forces the user to think about
the outcome of an action depending on the current situation. And you might
know by now that I "kind of dislike" this. ;-)

Now I would like to know if I am "a special case", or if we should change
the formatting behavior to:

"After a formatting was invoked, only affect newly typed characters at the
cursor position."
Of course this only applies if no characters were marked before.


"bfoman" stated that the current behavior is the default in MS Word 2010,
but in MS Word 2007, formatting works like I would expect (and proposed)
it. An old version of LibreOffice (3.3.4) already shows that behavior and I
do not know since when it exists. This might be a "big" change if it is an
ancient way to handle formatting. On the other side it might be something
that would not matter to 99.9 % of the users, but changing it would please
the remaining 0.1 %.


The reasoning behind this behavior is that the user isn't likely to start
typing in the middle of a word, and therefore it makes more sense to format
the word the cursor is in instead of formatting only the letters typed
inside the word. Honestly, I can't think of a use case where the user would
want to type inside a word he typed before, but using different formatting
from the rest of the word.
The current behavior makes it easier to format words -- instead of
painstakingly selecting a word, the user can simply click anywhere inside
that word to apply some formatting.
This may not sound like a huge time-saver, but if one does all his
formatting in one go, perhaps to highlight some keywords, it makes things
much more efficient.

Context


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