This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------090009050600040506010601 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit On 06/05/2012 05:12 AM, Rick Blok - LR wrote: > > Hi, > > I’ve got a report with several child documents. I’m tracking changes > and show them in the output to let my supervisor know what has changed > since the last update. Sometimes I have to make interim reports in > which I don’t want to show the changes. If I disable ‘show changes in > output’ in the master document, changes are still visible in the pdf. > Instead, I have to disable show changes in output for every child > document. > > This is unexpected behaviour for me since usually, all settings are > copied from the master document to child documents. Why is track > changes an exception? > This definitely seems wrong. Unfortunately, it's not as easy to fix as one might hope. The problem---if anyone's reading this---is that Paragraph::latex() takes a BufferParams argument, whereas we would need to access the master Buffer to fix this. Should Paragraph::latex() instead take a Buffer? Is there actually any good reason it needs such an argument? Why not just find the BufferParams via inset_owner_? Richard --------------090009050600040506010601 Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit On 06/05/2012 05:12 AM, Rick Blok - LR wrote:

Hi,

 

I’ve got a report with several child documents. I’m tracking changes and show them in the output to let my supervisor know what has changed since the last update. Sometimes I have to make interim reports in which I don’t want to show the changes. If I disable ‘show changes in output’ in the master document, changes are still visible in the pdf. Instead, I have to disable show changes in output for every child document.

 

This is unexpected behaviour for me since usually, all settings are copied from the master document to child documents. Why is track changes an exception?

 

This definitely seems wrong. Unfortunately, it's not as easy to fix as one might hope. The problem---if anyone's reading this---is that Paragraph::latex() takes a BufferParams argument, whereas we would need to access the master Buffer to fix this. Should Paragraph::latex() instead take a Buffer? Is there actually any good reason it needs such an argument? Why not just find the BufferParams via inset_owner_?

Richard

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