On Nov 19, 2003, at 17:43, Evan Prodromou wrote:
So, I take it that you're saying that the
top-level headers should
always be ==like this==, with sub-headers smaller? And that having
=this= render as great big <h1>'s is by design?
The page title *is the* top-level heading. Within an article's text, ==
is the highest level you should be using.
And that other code, like the TOC or the header
numbering, expects
top-level headers to be ==like this==?
Page title -> <h1>Page title</h1>
== Header == -> <h2>Header</h2>
=== Subheader === -> <h3>Subheader</h3>
==== Subsubheader ==== -> <h4>Subsubheader</h4>
etc
== Another header == -> <h2>Another header</h2>
If you skip levels, like this:
== Header ==
==== Oops, too many ====
etc, things get confused and cannot assign section levels correctly.
I can totally live with that. I just don't like
having top-level
section headers be different for different pages, just to get the
output correct.
I'm not sure I understand what you mean here. On what sort of page
would you do something different?
-- brion vibber (brion @
pobox.com)