David Kastrup <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I think the reason would likely be that the font-locking displays > exponents with a smaller font, and this includes the spaces used for > indentation.
Ah, weird. > Of course, after cut&paste the difference disappears. Tricky. It is > probably the sanest course to stop the exponent/subscript treatment > completely (or switch it to just different colors instead of > size/position changes) as soon as a single newline is part of the > construct. Yes, that makes much sense. If I start splitting a formula up into multiple lines, this means that I stopped trying to intuitively read it, and rely on logical understanding instead, anyway. Regards, Frank -- Frank Küster Single Molecule Spectroscopy, Protein Folding @ Inst. f. Biochemie, Univ. Zürich Debian Developer (teTeX/TeXLive) _______________________________________________ bug-auctex mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-auctex
