We recently received a request and working patch for Python-Markdown which adds support for starting an ordered list with the number given on the first line. For example:
3. Foo 4. Bar would result in <ol> <li start="3">Foo</li> <li>Bar</li> </ol> I'm not opposed to adding this, but I noticed that no other implementation (of those on Babelmark) implements this by default (not counting Pandoc's extended mode). I haven't checked if other implementations offer this as an option. My question is: should this be an option to turn on and off, and if so, should it be on or off by default? JG states in the docs: > If you do use lazy list numbering, however, you should still start > the list with the number 1. At some point in the future, Markdown > may support starting ordered lists at an arbitrary number. Given that statement, it would seem that on by default and without an option to turn if off would be fine. But what is the reality in the real world? If I did that, would a bunch of documents suddenly start rendering incorrectly - or at least different that expected? I guess the real question is: has everyone been ignoring that piece of advice in the docs and if so, is this something we should care about as implementors? -- ---- \X/ /-\ `/ |_ /-\ |\| Waylan Limberg _______________________________________________ Markdown-Discuss mailing list Markdown-Discuss@six.pairlist.net http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/markdown-discuss