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This document explains and elaborates on CNXML tags that you can insert into a Connexions document using Edit-in-Place.

Para

When working in Edit-in-Place, notice that the first item of the "Add Here" drop-down menu is "Paragraph". When you select this item and click Add Here , a text box will appear. You can now insert text in the white box, including inline tags . Note the id="element-143" in the upper left hand part of the blue box in [link] . element-143 is the paragraph's unique ID , which you can use to refer to the paragraph directly using a link tag. Also, you can find some helpful tips in the upper right-hand corner of the blue box: "Help editing<para>".

A paragraph box

When you click "insert and choose paragraph", a box like this should appear.

Submitted by j. cameron cooper

<para id='intro'>Working on trees or bushes can generate a lot of limbs and branches to haul away. If you just carry them, it'll takeall day. Instead, make a sledge.</para><para id="intro2">Find a large, complex branch to make the base of your sledge. It should be relatively flat, and broad and longenough to make a decent pile; that is, as big or bigger than anything else you need to haul away. Green branches fromhardwoods are best. Place it with the cut end pointing the way you want to go. If no single branch is good enough, twocan be used. Just place their cut ends a couple feet apart.</para><para id="intro3">Then pile on the remaining branches. Most will naturally weave together; if not, give 'em a little help. Once thepile it a few layers deep, smaller waste, like weeds or maybe even leaves can be added to the pile. If it getsunstable, another big branch will help.</para><para id="intro4">When you're done, grab the cut end of the bottom branch, and maybe the base of one of the other big branches in thepile, and drag the thing where you want to go. You'll be surprised how much one person can drag!</para><para id="intro5">If you have a lot of leaves or similar small stuff to move, you can use a similar technique. Get a tarp, toss the leavesand weeds and whatnot in the middle, and then drag the whole thing away.</para>

which displays as the following:

Working on trees or bushes can generate a lot of limbs and branches to haul away. If you just carry them, it'll take all day. Instead, make asledge.

Find a large, complex branch to make the base of your sledge. It should be relatively flat, and broad and long enough to make a decent pile;that is, as big or bigger than anything else you need to haul away. Green branches from hardwoods are best. Place it with the cut endpointing the way you want to go. If no single branch is good enough, two can be used. Just place their cut ends a couple feet apart.

Then pile on the remaining branches. Most will naturally weave together; if not, give 'em a little help. Once the pile it a few layers deep,smaller waste, like weeds or maybe even leaves can be added to the pile. If it gets unstable, another big branch will help.

When you're done, grab the cut end of the bottom branch, and maybe the base of one of the other big branches in the pile, and drag the thingwhere you want to go. You'll be surprised how much one person can drag!

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Source:  OpenStax, 2008-'09 open education cup: high performance computing. OpenStax CNX. Oct 28, 2008 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10594/1.3
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