The following are two successive horizontal lines (hr elements).You can type either before or after it, though.This table is inside a cell of another table.Thanks to Magic Line you can type after this element, too. Pellentesque bibendum, urna sem vel risus. Etiam rutrum, urna tellus dui vel tincidunt mattis egestas, justo fringilla vel, massa. Nevertheless, you can type between the lists. is a neighbor of the horizontal line above. Thanks to Magic Line you can easily place the cursor in between them: The following are two successive horizontal lines (hr elements).
This table is inside a cell of another table. Refer to the Magic Line article to learn more about this feature. Trigger the appearance of the magic line. New paragraph will be inserted into the document.Ī few configuration options are available to fine-tune this feature, including adjusting the magic line color, setting custom keyboard shortcuts, or adjusting which elements should When you click the magic line's handle (or use the default Shift+Ctrl+3 and Shift+Ctrl+4 keyboard shortcut), a Otherwise inaccessible place in an active editor. It causes a red line with a handle ( ) to appear when you hover your mouse over any such By default, this plugin is included in the Standard and FullĮditor distributions. This pertains to, for example, images, tables or elements that start or end aĭocument, lists, or even adjacent horizontal lines.ĬKEditor 4 introduced the Magic Line plugin that helps overcome these limitations. Some document elements make placing the cursor in their vicinity problematic. Unfortunately, this doesn't make up for what was missing for me from this book.Home / CKEditor 4 / Examples Magic Line Documentation There's rich use of language, fresh metaphors, and a high quality of writing. It's not like some other mysteries where you wonder if the author has ever talked to an actual police detective before writing the book.Įlizabeth Gunn also writes good prose. All of the actions and language ring true. Elizabeth Gunn does numerous ride-alongs with the Tucson Police Department and she obviously knows her stuff.
On the other hand, the police procedural material was excellent. And it's not a thriller where you're on the edge of your seat, wondering if the heroine (or hero) is going to be trapped and killed by the bad guy. Since half the fun of reading a mystery for me is trying to figure out whodunnit, I wasn't happy with knowing the answer to that question from the beginning of the book. Several chapters are written from the point of view of the criminals. The reader knows from the beginning who committed the crime.
I was also disappointed that there was no mystery in this novel. Since good characters are what makes a story interesting to me, the book was a disappointment. She's a competent homicide detective and she has a boyfriend and a mother and a niece she lives with, but I couldn't identify with any of what Sarah was feeling because she never seemed to feel anything. Never does the reader get a strong sense of emotion from Sarah. Margie has strict rules for what qualifies as pink: it must be a visceral reaction and it must be for the point of view character. It needs more pink! Margie Lawson, in her EDITS system, uses pink to highlight writing that shows emotion. This book had the same weakness as the last Sarah Burke mystery I read.