MH> Huge padding in the table cells, on my browser. Yeah, that's usually from a too-long-line in an example, but I don't have any. LB> The reason the xenodata element doesn't format properly is that LB> you've shovelled an obscenely long line (the one containing the LB> mods:abstract) into the exemplum. Ack! Of course, you're absolutely right. I completely missed that when I scanned for long lines. Boy, that's embarrassing. Thanks, Lou. MH> the prose section: [#HD9] doesn't actually mention the <xenoData> MH> element. Egads. Why isn't the <specDesc> showing up? Will investigate. ... Ah. That's why. It's not there. Don't know what happened, but it's in now. I also added a bit more prose. LB> I know you didn't ask anyone to do this, but I just thought I'd do it LB> anyway: I checked out your branch and tried to build it locally. Nay! You were off in Google-won't-let-me-hangout land when I said it, but this was exactly what I asked for. Thank you. LB> Worked, as they say, up to a point: but it fell over checking LB> validity of the revised P5 it had just built (my guess is that LB> p5.nvdl needs to know about the namespaces you're using) Interesting ... but (as they say) it works for me. My first thought was that, since I have my own executable `onvdl` command, we were using different versions. But in fact, when on a GNU/Linux system (as opposed to Mac OS X), my `onvdl` command just runs the same .jar file that `./run-onvdl` would run if there were no local command. (I.e., ./oNVDL/bin/onvdl.jar.) So that's not it. I don't really understand this. If no one pops up with a theory of the problem, I will try to investigate more thoroughly later in the week. And yes, the example is long, but is it really *too* long? Perhaps. My initial thought was "well, we're not printing these anymore", so at just over 1 screen-full, it wasn't much of a problem. But if I unwrap that long line it will be more like 2-3 full screens worth, which is a real problem. So yeah, I guess you're right. Sigh. Will try to scare up a shorter true MODS example. Thank you, Martin & Lou!