On Friday, 04th July, 2003, at 10:31, Tarquin wrote:
Daniel Mayer wrote:
[Snip]
> It would be /real/ nice to be able to disable the
TOC on a page by
page
basis.
Better the other way round: *request* it on a page-by-page basis.
Indeed. As I see it, right now, to avoid the mess created by a TOC which
is
inapplicable in many situations, an editor either has to know how to
disable
said TOC, or (often substantially) refactor the article; both of these
form
an imposition on the editor. Personally, I think TOCs should be a
visibly
available and recommended feature, *but* should not be enabled by
default.
There are too many articles to implement such a one-size-fits-all
policy.
On the semi-related note of inter-article sub-linking ([[a#x]]) as
opposed
to intra-article sub-linking ([[#x]]), I also think that having support
for
this (the former) is a Bad Thing(tm); given that we are so set against
it
being used, adding the deprecated functionality to the system is
(highly)
illogical, IMO.
[Snip]
Yours,
--
James D. Forrester
<mailto:jon@eh.org> | <mailto:csvla@dcs.warwick.ac.uk>
<mailto:jamesdforrester@hotmail.com> | <mailto:james@jdforrester.org>