Adobe 17510676 User Guide - Page 35

Formatting text with the Control palette, Applying type styles, system. For example, if Courier Roman

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ADOBE INDESIGN CS PAGEMAKER EDITION 31 User Guide Supplement is is one of the most pleasant variations I A ed, the lemon is a perfect complimen is is one of the most pleasant variations I B ed, the lemon is a perfect complimen Default position of inline graphics A. InDesign B. PageMaker Note that PageMaker always applies auto-leading to inline graphics, even if you've applied fixed leading to the surrounding text. In InDesign, you can specify separate leading for an inline graphic. By default, inline graphics use the same leading as the text surrounding them. For more information about applying baseline shift or changing leading, see InDesign Help. Formatting text with the Control palette The Control palette in InDesign is very similar to the Control palette in PageMaker. When you select text or click an insertion point in a text frame, the Control palette changes to display two modes for formatting text: Paragraph mode and Character mode. The options displayed in each mode match those displayed in PageMaker. For more information about using the Control palette, see InDesign Help. In InDesign, the options displayed in the Control palette's Paragraph mode match the options in the Paragraph palette; the options displayed in the Control palette's Character mode match those in the Character palette. (For details, see InDesign Help.) Applying type styles InDesign handles type styles differently than PageMaker. In PageMaker, you can apply the same set of type styles (bold, italic, underline, strikethrough, and reverse) to any text, regardless of which font was applied. In InDesign, type styles are directly related to the fonts available on your system. For example, if Courier Roman, Courier Bold, and Courier Italic are installed and available, the type styles available for Courier text will be Roman, Bold, and Italic. This ensures that fonts in your document appear as intended by the font designer. However, some fonts do not have bold or italic styles. Note: You can skew type to simulate an italic type style (PageMaker did this when an italic version of a font was not available), but the results are not as professional as using a true oblique or italic font. (For details, see InDesign Help.) Type styles displayed in the Control palette

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31
ADOBE INDESIGN CS PAGEMAKER EDITION
User Guide Supplement
Default position of inline graphics
A.
InDesign
B.
PageMaker
Note that PageMaker always applies auto-leading
to inline graphics, even if you’ve applied fixed
leading to the surrounding text. In InDesign, you
can specify separate leading for an inline graphic.
By default, inline graphics use the same leading as
the text surrounding them.
For more information about applying
baseline shift or changing leading, see
InDesign Help.
Formatting text with the Control palette
The Control palette in InDesign is very similar to
the Control palette in PageMaker. When you select
text or click an insertion point in a text frame, the
Control palette changes to display two modes for
formatting text: Paragraph mode and Character
mode. The options displayed in each mode match
those displayed in PageMaker.
For more information about using the Control
palette, see InDesign Help.
In InDesign, the options displayed in the
Control palette’s Paragraph mode match the
options in the Paragraph palette; the options
displayed in the Control palette’s Character mode
match those in the Character palette. (For details, see
InDesign Help.)
Applying type styles
InDesign handles type styles differently than
PageMaker. In PageMaker, you can apply the same
set of type styles (bold, italic, underline,
strikethrough, and reverse) to any text, regardless
of which font was applied. In InDesign, type styles
are directly related to the fonts available on your
system. For example, if Courier Roman, Courier
Bold, and Courier Italic are installed and available,
the type styles available for Courier text will be
Roman, Bold, and Italic. This ensures that fonts in
your document appear as intended by the font
designer. However, some fonts do not have bold or
italic styles.
Note:
You can skew type to simulate an italic type
style (PageMaker did this when an italic version of
a font was not available), but the results are not as
professional as using a true oblique or italic font.
(For details, see InDesign Help.)
Type styles displayed in the Control palette
is is one of the most pleasant variations I
ed, the lemon
is a perfect complimen
is is one of the most pleasant variations I
ed, the lemon
is a perfect complimen
A
B