At least, when that hyperref'd link (in my case, a citation) is in a footnote, and there's another link on the same page, not in the footnote, which spans the same page break.
The result: the whole page is blue (hyperref-colored) and hyperlinked to the main text link's reference. If there's only the footnote link spanning the page-break, but no main text link, the whole page is hyperlinked to the footnote link's reference, but it's not blue. Bizarre.
This isn't technically an S&P issue; maybe it's a no-fix for us. But we might offer some kind of work-around? At least, this is something to watch out for and document somewhere if we don't want to fix
At least, when that hyperref'd link (in my case, a citation) is in a footnote, and there's another link on the same page, not in the footnote, which spans the same page break.
The result: the whole page is blue (hyperref-colored) and hyperlinked to the main text link's reference. If there's only the footnote link spanning the page-break, but no main text link, the whole page is hyperlinked to the footnote link's reference, but it's not blue. Bizarre.
This isn't technically an S&P issue; maybe it's a no-fix for us. But we might offer some kind of work-around? At least, this is something to watch out for and document somewhere if we don't want to fix
Reference with a (different) full example: http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/54136/hyperref-link-spans-a-pagebreak-looks-ugly
P.S. Aren't pages obsolete anyway? :)