Dear Don,
Thanks for your detailed message! If I understand well your explanation of diamonds, they should definitely NOT appear when I make a change in a style, or in the style set, of an open document. There is something definitely wrong there.
And diamonds cannot be disregarded. Suppose that, after some change in the styles, all the styles in my document become afflicted with diamonds (this often happens to me). Now suppose that I make some change to character style C, from the character style palette. The change will not be reflected in my document, because it no longer contains instances of style C, but only instances of style diamond-C! This kind of thing is VERY annoying.
As to the large number of styles I have, the reason is that the document I am writing is very technical and must use several different fonts and a quite a few different paragraph formats that occur repeatedly. If I create a new style B2 that is close to style B1, I want to have both style names next to each other in the long style list. And the introduction of a new style might require a rearrangement of the keyboard equivalents. Or sometimes I'll want to change the name of a particular style. Such things often happen when one is working on this sort of document.
By the way, the sample document you sent me back seemed at first not to exhibit the problems in question. God knows why! But, playing further with it, it started exhibiting the same problems again. God knows why...
I have become convinced that somehow my style sets have become corrupted. The problems I describe seem not to occur when I use Mellel's default style set. However the perspective of having to recreate my style sets from scratch is not too enticing...
I have used complex style sets in Word for fifteen years and never encountered ANY problem with Word styles. I prefer Mellel, but I may have to abandon it. Meanwhile I'll get by by reapplying my style set to my document (with "Match by style name") every time the diamonds reappear (often).
Should this problem be escalated to the Redlers?
florrain
