You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
At least, when that hyperref'd link (in my case, a citation) is in a footnote, and there's another link on the same page, not in the footnote, which spans the same page break.
The result: the whole page is blue (hyperref-colored) and hyperlinked to the main text link's reference. If there's only the footnote link spanning the page-break, but no main text link, the whole page is hyperlinked to the footnote link's reference, but it's not blue. Bizarre.
This isn't technically an S&P issue; maybe it's a no-fix for us. But we might offer some kind of work-around? At least, this is something to watch out for and document somewhere if we don't want to fix
At least, when that hyperref'd link (in my case, a citation) is in a footnote, and there's another link on the same page, not in the footnote, which spans the same page break.
The result: the whole page is blue (hyperref-colored) and hyperlinked to the main text link's reference. If there's only the footnote link spanning the page-break, but no main text link, the whole page is hyperlinked to the footnote link's reference, but it's not blue. Bizarre.
This isn't technically an S&P issue; maybe it's a no-fix for us. But we might offer some kind of work-around? At least, this is something to watch out for and document somewhere if we don't want to fix
Reference with a (different) full example: http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/54136/hyperref-link-spans-a-pagebreak-looks-ugly
P.S. Aren't pages obsolete anyway? :)
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: