<html>
<head>
<base href="https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/">
</head>
<body>
<p>
<div>
<b><a class="bz_bug_link
bz_status_NEW "
title="NEW - Please add the ability to search for Page Styles"
href="https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=133300#c14">Comment # 14</a>
on <a class="bz_bug_link
bz_status_NEW "
title="NEW - Please add the ability to search for Page Styles"
href="https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=133300">bug 133300</a>
from <span class="vcard"><a class="email" href="mailto:mikekaganski@hotmail.com" title="Mike Kaganski <mikekaganski@hotmail.com>"> <span class="fn">Mike Kaganski</span></a>
</span></b>
<pre>(In reply to Heiko Tietze from <a href="show_bug.cgi?id=133300#c3">comment #3</a>)
<span class="quote">> First page has style "Left page", second after manual break "Right page".
> Ctrl+H > Attributes... = Page Style > Find = Right page, Replace = Left page
> => neither Find nor Replace work. So the point is that we actually have the
> feature but it's not working as expected.</span >
This is misconception.
Searching for attributes is not meant to work like you imagined: setting a
checkmark to an attribute, then put the wanted attribute values into
Find/Replace boxes. That would, e.g., be meaningless if you check several
attributes... The feature allows searching for *text* defined in the Find box,
which has the attributes selected that simply differ from default. See help [1]
for details.
A different thing is that actually selecting "Page style" attribute doesn't
seem to work anyway.
Note also that page style is a setting of a paragraph (style), so searching for
"page style" would only make sense when searching for paragraphs ...
[1]
<a href="https://help.libreoffice.org/6.4/en-US/text/shared/guide/find_attributes.html">https://help.libreoffice.org/6.4/en-US/text/shared/guide/find_attributes.html</a></pre>
</div>
</p>
<hr>
<span>You are receiving this mail because:</span>
<ul>
<li>You are the assignee for the bug.</li>
</ul>
</body>
</html>