Hi Friends, I sent this message earlier, but the attachment has apparently put it over the size limit. So it's waiting for a moderator, for now. But perhaps could be answered without the PNG. So just in case, here's the message, and if the screenshot is needed, I'll try to figure some way to send it. Original message below: This is something I noticed a long, long time ago, and never really questioned. But now I'm writing a tutorial about node editing, and it seems a good time to find out. When more than 1 node are all stacked up, precisely on top of each other -- if it's an even number of nodes, then they appear to be smaller than a regular node. (see in the top aqua circle in the attached ne12.png) It's what you see if you use "Break path at selected nodes". But if there are an odd number of nodes all stacked up, it looks just like a regular node. So there's no visible clue -- you only know how many nodes might be there, if you happen to select them (by dragging a selection box around), or if you already know, or happen to remember what's there. I'm curious why it's made that way, and whether it might be helpful if any number of stacked up nodes can look like the even number of stacked up nodes (just a smaller node). Well, I would find it helpful anyway, and wonder if others might as well. I'd appreciate if anyone can explain.
Thank you very much, brynn