-<p><strong>Multiple Alignment Views<strong></p>
-<p>Multiple alignment views allow's the same alignment to be viewed in
-many different ways, either as multiple alignment tabs, or simultaneously in
-linked alignment windows. A view is an independent visualization of
-the same alignment, so each may have a different ordering, colouring,
-row and column hiding and seuqence feature and annotation display
-setting, but alignment, feature and annotation edits are common to
-all, since this affects the underlying data.
-</p>
-<p>
-A new view is created using the <strong>"View→New View"</strong> menu item, or by pressing
-<strong>Control+T</strong>. A newly created view will be identical to
-the view it was created from, but any changes to the way the alignment
-is coloured or displayed will only affect the new view.
-</p>
-<p>A particular view may focus on some specific aspect of an alignment -
-for example, hiding all but the region of an alignment containing a
-particular domain. <strong>Right-clicking</strong> a view's tab opens
-the View Name dialog box, allowing it to be renamed to something more
-meaningful.
-</p>
+<p><strong>Multiple Alignment Views</strong></p>
+<p>Multiple alignment views allows the same alignment to be viewed
+independently in many different ways simultaneously. Each view is an
+independent visualization of the same alignment, so each may have a
+different ordering, colouring, row and column hiding and seuqence
+feature and annotation display setting, but alignment, feature and
+annotation edits are common to all, since this affects the underlying
+data.</p>
+<p>Create a new view using the <strong>"View→New
+View"</strong> menu item, or by pressing <strong>Control+T</strong>. A newly
+created view will be identical to the view it was created from, but any
+changes to the way the alignment is coloured or displayed will only
+affect the new view.</p>
+<!-- TODO sharing selections between views -->
+<p>A particular view may focus on some specific aspect of an
+alignment - for example, hiding all but the region of an alignment
+containing a particular domain. <strong>Right-clicking</strong> a view's
+tab opens the View Name dialog box, allowing it to be renamed to
+something more meaningful.</p>