Quote:
Originally Posted by Hitch
Custom symbols, in my experience, is what kills lists. eBook HTML doesn't support anything but the regular old HTML symbols, so...if it were me, I'd try it with regular symbols and regular classes and see if it works. If it does, you instantly have your answer.
When we use custom symbols, at my shop, we have to hand-code the CSS for the list elements, because otherwise, as I said, they don't work. I'm 98% sure that's right; I haven't double-checked with my crews this morning about it, but last time I was involved in a discussion with them around this topic, that was the case.
Hitch
|
I too am not in favor of having too much 'custom' list in the book, but the book in question is very unique in this aspect and the content requires all these custom list markers to guide the reader to the specific context.
For testing purposes, I've used the regular, old, and generic HTML list markers and symbols and they displayed fine. But as I mentioned above, the custom list marker serves a much more crucial role here.