Summary: | Autocorrect and toolbar bulleted and numbered list not assigned to style | ||
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Product: | LibreOffice | Reporter: | al F <public> |
Component: | Writer | Assignee: | Not Assigned <libreoffice-bugs> |
Status: | RESOLVED DUPLICATE | ||
Severity: | enhancement | CC: | libreoffice-ux-advise, mikekaganski, rafael.palma.lima |
Priority: | medium | Keywords: | needsUXEval |
Version: | unspecified | ||
Hardware: | All | ||
OS: | All | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Crash report or crash signature: | Regression By: | ||
Bug Depends on: | |||
Bug Blocks: | 103341, 103369 |
Description
al F
2022-08-30 20:51:50 UTC
I support this enhancement. I have gone through this issue many times myself. Even without ticking "Bulleted and numbered lists", you can still experience this issue. For instance: 1) Create a blank Writer document 2) Enter a few lines of text 3) Select these lines and go to Format - Lists - Unordered list (or use the Toggle unordered list command in the toolbar) 4) Notice that the list has received a generic formatting not associated with any of the list styles (see it in the Styles sidebar under the List Styles category) IMO the "Unordered list" and "Ordered list" commands should be associated with one of the default list styles. We have several methods to enable lists on paragraph: by auto correction, via UNO command .uno:DefaultBullet (toolbar, sidebar, menu, shortcut), and as a list style (Styles menu or Stylist deck at the sidebar). All methods use their own list style, not a big deal for unordered lists but a source of trouble with numbering. So the idea is to apply a default style, which could be "Bullet •" or another "Default unordered list" list style in all ways of interaction. By doing so you would have to change just the default list style. The idea is not new and has been requested in bug 69724. *** This bug has been marked as a duplicate of bug 69724 *** Sorry for overlooking the duplicate. One question: what does UNO in "UNO command" stand for? (In reply to al F from comment #3) > Sorry for overlooking the duplicate. > > One question: what does UNO in "UNO command" stand for? UNO = (Universal Network Objects) For more detail see: https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Documentation/DevGuide/Professional_UNO |