----- Original Message ----- 
  
  
  Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2000 5:32 
PM
  Subject: RE: GEMS 1.16.1 Header 
  Editor
  
   
  
    
    I'd 
    like an elaboration on the purpose of each of the radio buttons as well as 
    the Soft check box in the Grouping Options group box in the Header 
    Editor.
     
    Nel  
 
   
  Sigh.  That's a 
  fair question.  
   
  I had a document for 
  this about 4 years ago (before GEMS was called GEMS), but it has long since 
  evaporated.  The honest answer is that the auto layout grouping options 
  were overbuilt and no one uses them -- pretend they aren't there and pick 
  Scroll.  
   
  Here is a bit of 
  history.  Since manually laying out a ballot in VTS was basically 
  impossible for mortals (everything was ASCII), you had to rely on auto layout 
  to create your artwork.  The standard operating procedure at the time was 
  to (1) guess what auto layout flags would make the ballot lay out right, 
  (2) batch generate every ballot, (3) print them all out, (4) proof them all to 
  see which didn't lay out right, and then (1) tweak the flags and 
  repeat.  I think Sophie might be the only one left with the company that 
  remembers that black art.  Suffice to say, when asked what features the 
  VTS rewrite should have, the first thing support would tell us was 
  "more auto layout options".
   
  GEMS' graphical "desk 
  top publishing" layout shifted the paradigm.  Better to charge by the 
  hour to lay it out on screen.
   
   
  That said, I suppose I 
  am going to have to answer the damn question...
   
   
  If you look at the 
  Ballot Options you will see a field "Layout Count".  It allows you to 
  define more than one ballot layout for an election.  You can for example 
  say that your first choice for ballot layout might be a three column 
  11 inch ballot.  Your second choice might be a 3 column 14 inch 
  ballot.  You would do this if you know most ballots are going 
  to lay out in 11 inches, but the ones in the city (say) are going to require 
  14 inches because of some big refendum.
   
  One function of a 
  header is to organize races into a group.  A header proceeds a group of 
  races linked to it.  A good example of this might be "Judicial" races or 
  "County" races.  The Grouping Options are there to keep 
  that set of races together.  If auto layout can't keep the races together 
  using the first ballot layout (e.g. 11 inch) it will start over with the next 
  choice (e.g. 14 inch).
   
  The options 
  are:
  
    - 
    
Scroll.  Allow 
    the race group to continue into the next column/side/card.  Scroll 
    always succeeds to lay out, because GEMS can always proceed to another card 
    if there is no room for the current race it is trying to lay 
    out.
     - 
    
Same Side.  
    Allow the race group to continue into the next column, but keep 
    them in the current side.  If all races in the group 
    won't fit in the current 
    side, start over with the next ballot layout.
     - 
    
One Side.  Try 
    laying out the group in the current side.  If that doesn't work, 
    proceed to the next side, and try laying them out again.  If that 
    doesn't work, start over with the next ballot 
    layout.
     - 
    
Same Column.  
    Analogous to same side, but for columns.  Lay out the group in the 
    current column.  If they don't all fit in the current column, start 
    over with the next ballot layout.
     - 
    
One Column.  
    Analogous to one side, but for columns.  Lay out the group in the 
    current column.  Failing that, proceed to the next column, or the first 
    column of the next side.  Failing that, proceed to the next ballot 
    layout.
     - 
    
One Column Same 
    Side.  Same as one column, except that it won't proceed to the first 
    column of the next side.
     - 
    
Inherit.  
    Use whatever the previous race group's option was for this group 
    also.
 
  The "Soft" flag 
  applies to the One Side, One Column, and One Col Same Side rules.  Each 
  of these rules tries the next side/column if the current side/column 
  fails.  If the group still fails to lay out in the next side/column, then 
  we start over with the next ballot layout.  
   
  The soft flag allows 
  you to say "forget this rule if you can't do it".  If the group can't lay 
  out in the next side/column, then forget the rule entirely and treat the group 
  as if it were the Scroll grouping option, which always 
  succeeds.
   
   
  Lets never speak of 
  this again.
   
  Ken