Sorry, I wasn't being clear. I meant to say that mostly the cases where there is an additional line feed at the end of the file, or in the middle of the text, dont have any noticeable effect at all on the display of the HTML, or the PDF generated. The cases where they do matter are limited to the HTML derived from ODD sources. For my (limited) purposes a difference matters if the HTML is different now from what we have in "expected-results". Of course, in many cases, the output could be adjusted to look nicer and there are plenty of cases where the formatting is suboptimal, but getting that right isn't the object of the exercise: we just want to be sure that the changed stylesheets produce the same output for the same input, modulo new materials. On 15/12/15 14:00, Peter Stadler wrote:
I’m not sure whether that’s true. The one I’ve seen appeared in a verbatim environment (egXML) where the Stylesheets put a lot of effort into indentation and of line breaks in mixed content elements (as far as I understood). So I think those extra line breaks qualify as a regression.
Best Peter
Am 15.12.2015 um 14:51 schrieb Lou Burnard
: b) there are a few changes in presence of linebreaks or whitespace, but they all seem to be benign