On 2/15/08 1:51 PM, "mf" wrote:

> Every section is numbered has an indented numbered subsection,
> followed by a indented numbered paragraph, followed by a  a indented
> and numbered subparagraph. This layout is critical to knowing where
> you are in the statute. If you copy and paste into plain text you lose
> it and get a single undifferentiated block of text. Impossible to know
> where you are or what section, subsection etc you are reading.

Okay.  I still don't see the Big, but it's your document.

(Most statutes that I've ever seen have sections numbered quite extensively,
so that one would always know "where they are" in the document by the number
of the section/paragraph/etc.)


I just can not get my head around the notion the visual representation on
the page is more important than the text of the document.

For example, PDF to RTF keeps nearly all things like headings and such, so,
again, I just think that there might be an habitual way of working
interfering with creative approaches to make your 33 page document more
accessible to you, and at a size that is healthy for your eyes.

Again, I won't belabor the point.  (But I'd sure solve the problem if it
were me.)

-- 
G



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