<style-conflict>
In case of conflicts between flagging methods at different levels (for example, a section is flagged green and a paragraph within the section is flagged red), the most deeply nested flagging method applies.
In case of conflicts between flagging methods on the same element (for example, a single element is being flagged with both green and red color), it is recommended that the conflicts be resolved as follows:
Flagging method | Conflict behavior |
---|---|
<startflag> / <endflag> | Add all flags that apply. |
color | Follow the <style-conflict> @foreground-conflict-color setting, or use an output-appropriate default color if no conflict color is set. |
backcolor | Follow the <style-conflict> @background-conflict-color setting, or use an output-appropriate default color if no conflict color is set. |
style | Add all font styles that apply. If two different kinds of underline are used, default to the heaviest (double underline) and use the @foreground-conflict-color. |
changebar | Add all change bars that apply. |
Contains
(empty)
Contained by
Example
See the example in the <val> description.
Attributes
The following attributes are available on this element:
- @foreground-conflict-color
- The color to be used when more than one flagging color applies to a single content element.
- @background-conflict-color
- The color to be used when more than one flagging background color applies to a single content element.