
No, it's so if I tell you that the passage I'm reading is on page 54, you can go to page 54 and find it. Or if you switch from your phone on the train to the paper copy at home, you can tell where to pick up. Or if you go to the library to look at the real illustrations, or maps, or drawings, you'll be able to find them. On Fri, Feb 3, 2012 at 8:38 PM, James Adcock <jimad@msn.com> wrote:
To where? ****
** **
Well, I would move the page tags to before the start of the next paragraph, so that a paragraph is understood to belong to the page that it started on. If you move the page tags out of the middle of the paragraph then you have more attractive less intrusive options for placement, and which “works” on more devices.****
** **
The point isn't to visualize exactly where the page breaks in the text, it is to****
give the user some idea which page he's on. ****
** **
Why would the user care? The argument I’ve heard is that college students need to be able to ref the page when they write a “book review” for their profs. Not that the PG/DP page numbers are currently accurate enough to allow that in any case.****
** **
_______________________________________________ gutvol-d mailing list gutvol-d@lists.pglaf.org http://lists.pglaf.org/mailman/listinfo/gutvol-d