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       Andrew, I agree; and I find your words are so beautifully priceless;
          this whole discussion reminds me of the news industry - the way
it was  :-)

       BTW - for you post-computer youngsters, I grew up in the news
industry; reading, writing, and yes having to wash my hands - even clothing
- from the newsprint ink  ;-)



On Tue, Aug 7, 2012 at 12:03 AM, Andrew Brager <apb3304@bak.rr.com> wrote:

On 8/6/2012 6:47 PM, Dan wrote:

Doug wrote:

On 08/06/2012 08:58 PM, Mirosław Zalewski wrote:

On 07/08/2012 at 02:40, Andrew Brager<apb3304@bak.rr.com>  wrote:

 Without meaning to fan the flames, can you provide another citation
outside of LO that supports the theory espoused?

That "register true" is for "adjust to baseline" or whatever?

Take any book about typography. I can cite at least three different
book titles
from memory that will support it. But they are all in Polish, so I
doubt they
will be much of use here.

ROTFL!  --doug


http://www-10.lotus.com/ldd/**lswiki.nsf/dx/General_**Glossary_ls301<http://www-10.lotus.com/ldd/lswiki.nsf/dx/General_Glossary_ls301>

I found this link. You will have to search down through this article.
Lotus, I believe is an IBM product as in Lotus Symphony. It has the same
two paragraphs that LO and AOO have.

--Dan


Again, without meaning to fan any flames or otherwise sound insulting,
quite frankly in my opinion the link is a weak one for various reasons,
including lack of a verifiable author with impressive sounding credentials.
 I was looking more for something along the lines of a historical citation.
 Perhaps a book or article about the history of the printing press,
newspapers and/or typography.  Towards that end I looked at various sources
for typography, none of them mention "register true" that I could find. A
google search on register true turns up only the LO help page.

It's just odd to me that something that is supposed to have been in use
for many years isn't mentioned anywhere authoritative (other than perhaps a
few Polish books in Miroslaw's memory).  Granted the term is relatively
obscure, but "parellelepiped" is in the dictionary and that arguably is
even more obscure.  Other obscure words include "ninnyhammer" and
"flibbertigibbet" which I've only just learned.



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