Quote:
Originally Posted by theducks
 you are using the built in Catalog, not Calibre's Catalog. Gotcha now. 
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Yes, I've come to the realization that Calibre simply isn't for me. I understand now why it does things the way it does, but I dislike it. Maybe some time in the future I'll reinstall it but use it just for conversion purposes on occasion.
Quote:
Catalog work like this on the Lbook (Astak)
The Book is the trunk (the Menu is part of the trunk)
You can only see other "trunk" branches (h1)at the trunk level
When you step onto the branch, you can see the path back (1)
and the path(s) forward (2-7) (h2 ?)
Once you step onto the next branch, you can see the return (1) and more branches (h3 ?)
The return key (1 to N layers) is the bail out key Pressing a number may show the next level (+ symbol next to the number) OR Jump to the place in the document.
Now if you are designing a document:
h3 is for the Chapter (start), but to be consistant
we really use h4 anchors: #start, #onethird, #twothirds
Now the branch looks balanced(theoretically, the H3 takes you visually to the same point as h4 #start)
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That's what I discovered as I spent more time with it. I used to have a bunch of smaller files which I would go through, then go to the next file in the folder and so on. This one was larger, and the first time I realized I would have to use some sort of navigation structure within the file. If I remember correctly, I've got h1 for the title, h2 for the chapters, h3 for sections, and an occasional h4 for subsections. I tried to keep it as simple as possible.
What are #start, #onethird, #twothirds??