Ramalho wrote:
""" - Containment: Search the object, then its container, then the container's container, and so on. Ignore objects not in this chain.
- Context: Search the objects in precisely the reverse of the order in which they were mentioned, so "A.B.C.D" is always searched in the order "D", "C", "B", "A".
"""
But for me, A.B.C.D means that A contains B; B contains C; and C contains D, so I donŽt see the difference from the first definition.
There's a good slide in Michel's presentation at the open source conference. Imagine: -------------------- | ----- --------- | | | B | | C | | | ----- | ----- | | | | | D | | | | A | ----- | | | | | | | --------- | -------------------- So that "A" is a folder, "B" is an object in "A", "C" is a subfolder in "A", and "D" is an object in "C". Then "B" is acquirable by "D", or any object in "C", but "B" is not contained in either "C" or "D". Later, Jerry S.