In my limited experience, I have already encountered this and been surprised. I can see it both ways:
- On one hand: technically, the lead up of asterisks and the actual text define the headline itself, as Carsten has pointed out.
- On the other hand, from a user standpoint I think it would be convenient. I am not well versed in my keyboard-shortcut-fu, but I'm practicing and use M-a/e a bit. One of the reasons this behavior is a bit annoying is that M-a leads one to the spot /after/ an ellipsis. From there I want to press tab and see the headline... but no dice. I admit that I can begin to use the shortcuts specifically for navigating headlines. Learning a little at a time and so currently I don't.
Anyway, my vote goes to expand it, even if technically the cursor is after the 'body' since the 'body' is represented by the ellipsis. I think once it is folded it serves only as a representation of the headline, not anything useful having to do with actual folded text anymore.
John
Well, that may be technically correct, but from a UI point of view it isn't. We're still one the same (head)_line_, no?
On 26 Mar 2010, at 07:32, Carsten Dominik wrote:
> On Mar 24, 2010, at 7:04 PM, Anthony Lander wrote:
>
>> If the cursor is after the elipsis on a folded entry like this:
>>
>> **** Some entry...|
>>
>> pressing TAB doesn't expand the entry, or in fact, do anything useful at all. Is it possible to get it to expand the entry, or am I missing something?
>
> Cursor after the dots means the cursor is no longer in the headline,
> in fact it is no longer in the entry at all.
Not that I find this an important issue to fix, mind you :-)
Cheers,
Peter.
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