Yes, I would expect the opposite, because it is the text that is being
wrapped through or in background. "Through" would mean straight through
the object, "in background" would mean constituting the background of
the object.
If you look carefully at the icon for wrapping though, you'll see the
lines going over the object (not disappearing behind it). This confirms
my doubts that the English description of the functions is actually
reversed.
Aivaras
2013.09.03 01:45, Andrea Pescetti rašė:
Aivaras Stepukonis wrote:
Writer > Format > Wrap > Wrap Through / In Background
Aren't the names of these two functions actually mixed up?
I would think wrapping through would place the text above the object and
wrapping in background would place it underneath the text. Right now
it's the opposite.
It looks OK to me. See http://imagebin.org/269601 ; do you see (or
would you expect) something different?
Regards,
Andrea.
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