Hi Nicolas I agree, together all the below makes sense. Some comments added.
Nicolas Goaziou <m...@nicolasgoaziou.fr> wrote: > You are talking about section "3.5 The spreadsheet". I don't think this > feature is directly related to spreadsheet capabilities. > > Actually, / in first column is described earlier in the manual, in "3.3 > Column groups". Besides, there is a similar feature described in "3.2 > Column width and alignment", about lines containing only alignment > cookies: > > Lines which only contain these formatting cookies will be removed > automatically when exporting the document. <#> will have to be considered for removal of the line too. > IMO, a better change would be to merge 3.2 and 3.3 as "Column > operations" or some such, and add "<#>" as a way to ignore columns upon > exporting. This way, everything related to columns is packed in the same > subsection, and every column markup uses < or >. Moreover, there is no > possible confusion with # markup from spreadsheet. > > WDYT? > Another advantage about this is that there is no need for "/" in the > first column, much like alignments cookies. <#> will have to be fontified like <5> as org-formula (name and description of the face are not precise) wich is the easiest part of the change. Shouldn't < and > in a table be fontified too? > It makes it simpler to ignore the first column. Michael