by donb » Tue May 12, 2009 4:04 am
Sorry to have confused you with my explanations. I think I sort of assumed some facts about Mellel and its use of the diamond symbol, which I find are hardly mentioned in the official Mellel Guide, nor in my Beginners Tutorial.
The little diamond symbol is used by Mellel to indicate that the text originally used a font which is no longer installed in your computer, or used a style which for one reason or another is not in the particular style srt you have chosen for use right now. When it’s a matter of a font, Mellel substitutes another (hopefully similar) font. These things are indicated in the little oblong above the ruler by indicating either before the paragraph name or character name a little diamond symbol. Most of the time, this can be ignored, except when you are writing a very formal piece of material in which it is vital that everything be exactly right.
Inside the paragraph and character menus there are several categories. Very near the bottom of each of those menus, just before the words “save changes to style”, there is a small category which lists all of the fonts or paragraph styles which were found in the document which is open on your screen but which do not conform in some way to the way your document was originally set up (by “originally” I mean the last time you opened the document before now).
So the little diamond symbol can have several meanings, its primary purpose is to indicate that Mellel has made some sort of alteration, which usually is of interest only to specialists or to people who need to make a perfect document, but not for the usual everyday note, letter, or other item in which the precise font or the precise appearance of the paragraph styles is not of any particular importance.
The little diamonds which you find in the paragraph and character menus in the little section right near the bottom really need not concern you at all. I am so used to using Mellel that I sort of take this for granted.
In the sample document which you sent me, the style set that you had made for it is enormous. I count around 20 paragraph styles and something like 15 character styles. When looking at the style sets I get the impression that you sort of filled in just about every conceivable style, which could hardly all be used in any normal document or even in a specialized document. I presume the reason was to illustrate your problem, but it is hardly a real-life situation.
I find it hard to understand why you would want to move the position of the various styles inside a style set, or to change the keyboard shortcuts around. but we can let that be for now. The point that is important is that it doesn’t matter in the slightest that there are items with diamonds before them in the next-to-last little panel in the character and paragraph menus.
Now there is another point of importance here: normally Mellel adjusts the style set to be the one that was used when the document was last opened. If you have composed a text using a style set which you called “legalese”, when you next open that particular text document Mellel realizes that you used the “legalese” style set and continues to use that same style set. Only very rarely does occasion arise to change the style set which was previously used for your document.
Mellel kind of assumes that you are going to be consistent in the names which you give your character styles and your paragraph styles. So for example, if you have another style set named “Hopscotch”, you will have the same character styles names, although of course the details of exactly which font and which font size is meant by “normal” in the legalese style may well be different in the hopscotch style. That is why when you change the style of a document from legalese to hopscotch, Mellel asks you whether you want to have styles by the same name used, or styles which might have different names but are otherwise identical with the styles in the legalese document. You can save yourself an enormous amount of confusion, if you can be as consistent as possible with the style names which you give in your various style sets.
If the items in the portion of a menu which indicates diamonds really bother you, you can of course go to the replace styles in the file menu and replace each of the diamond type styles with the ones you really want, although this is hardly ever necessary.
As a rule, most people are content with just two or three style sets, if even that many. It is best to adjust the default set to contain your favorite and usual styles so that it is rare that you need a different styles set, although of course there can be some occasions when you do need to have a different style set: for example, when you want to have a particular style set for writing letters and a different set for composing a book. Even so, it usually turns out to be a great deal easier and more sensible to use a default template for each of these two purposes, with each of the two templates set up with the precise style sets which you want to use for your particular purpose.
Don Broadribb