



In practice the close because associated principle is violated in all sorts of design works, beginning with an ordinary layout. For example, a header is often placed so that its equally distant from the paragraphs above and below it. Although a reader mostly has enough grey matter to figure out where the header belongs, you had better get him to pay attention to contents rather than let him have a hard time making sense of the form. The header should always cling to the paragraph right under it.



