On 26 June 2013 03:26, Friedrich W. H. Kossebau <friedrich@kogmbh.com> wrote:
(There is also anothe issue, in that there are the parameters
"styleNameBefore" and "styleNameAfter", of which only "styleNameAfter" is
used, and for the other so far no use is seen. So ideally "styleNameBefore" is
removed and "styleNameAfter" is renamed to just "styleName")

+1 for this.
 
Now here are the samples where things fail ATM (always assuming A's ops have
priority):
Doc: <text:p>Text</text:p>
A: [<setParagraphStyle pos="0" styleNameAfter="S1" memberId="A"/>]
B: [<setParagraphStyle pos="3" styleNameAfter="S2" memberId="B"/>]
Obviously hard to know if both target the same paragraph.
Proposal: fix by identifying the paragraph with by its first position 
...
Using this proposal, there is another issue:
Doc: <text:p>AB</text:p><text:p>C</
text:p><text:p/>
A: [<setParagraphStyle pos="3" styleNameAfter="S1" memberId="A"/>]
B: [<removeText pos="0" length="1" memberId="B"/>]
How can the setParagraphStyle op be transformed against the removeText op, in
such a way that the pos attribute again points to the begin of the paragraph?
There is no information in the removeText op which paragraphs are affected and
how.
The desired intent is that each client end up with the same document, though the ops
are processed in a different order right.

Consider the following scenario:
<text:p>P1</text:p>

A: [<setParagraphStyle pos="P1 start" ...>]
B: [<splitParagraph pos="P1 start" ...>]

Client A processes A then B, and ends up with the style applied to both paragraphs (this is the intended result).
Client B splits first, then needs to realise that the style should be applied to the new paragraph as well.

If setParagraphStyle carries both the start and end of the paragraph positions, it would be trivial
to tell where the old styled paragraph ended. Every paragraph up to this point is expected to carry the
new style. For the above example, client B would perform the following

1. Apply splitParagraph at position 1 (just after the 'P'). This inserts a new cursor position.
2. Transform setParagraphStyle end pos (or length) by +1
3. setParagraphStyle fetches all paragraphs in the specified range and applies the style to these

Is there a glaring hole in that approach?


--
Philip Peitsch
Mob: 0439 810 260