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authorJörg Frings-Fürst <debian@jff-webhosting.net>2017-11-12 16:48:02 +0100
committerJörg Frings-Fürst <debian@jff-webhosting.net>2017-11-12 16:48:02 +0100
commitabdaad68fb94e2d61448a6dfc14847df8a2c32b9 (patch)
tree26855c5dd3bfffdbf319d5ba4a38223a28de3e7c /help/C/edit-crop.page
parent0f67b3cc674377559e66c5a6729fd499049a992f (diff)
parentdd7f98a232efe86f6e6055119c9414a0f9d9e67b (diff)
Merge branch 'feature/upstream' into develop
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@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@
</item>
</steps>
-<section>
+<section id="rule-of-thirds">
<title>What is the rule of thirds?</title>
<p>The <em>rule of thirds</em> helps you to choose a pleasing composition for a photo.</p>
<p>Imagine that the scene is divided up into a 3x3 grid by two equally-spaced vertical lines and two equally-spaced horizontal lines. According to the rule, you're more likely to get a pleasing composition if you align major features (like the horizon, or a person's body) with one of the lines. Paying attention to the way features flow from one part of the grid to another can also help.</p>