I only log cross country if I've made a landing greater than 50nm from my origin, but that isn't germane to the nit I'm about to pick:
During the logbook review portion of my Private checkride, the DPE noted that I had logged 3.0 hours of night flight, all of which was logged as cross-country time, including eight landings and eight laps of the pattern at the first cross-country destination airport, one landing at the second, and the tenth and final landing back at home base. He told me he didn't believe pattern work at a distant airport should be logged as part of the cross country time, even if you never exit the aircraft or shut down before departing. I guess I can see his point since pattern flying doesn't entail the type of navigation experience that logging cross-country time is designed to quantify. I don't know if he invented this definition or if he could point to some tidbit of legalese buried deep in the FARs. I have never really made a habit of doing pattern work at a distant airport in the time since that flight, so I never bothered to dig any deeper.