Apple M9057 User Manual - Page 234
Creating a style, the document controls you'd normally use to format text and objects such
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9-10 AppleWorks 5 User's Manual To restore a selection to its default state, choose Default on the pop-up menu. (For spreadsheets choose Default SS.) To restore an item to its original state, choose Unapply Style from the Edit menu on the stylesheet palette. (The name of the command varies depending on the style you applied.) Note You can set up AppleWorks to apply several styles at once. For example, applying a Bold, Italic style to text already formatted with the Number style gives you bold, italic, numbered text. To set this option up, choose Compound Styles from the stylesheet palette Edit menu. Creating a style In the Help index,* see: E styles, using You can create your own custom styles in any AppleWorks document. Note Although you can create a style at any time, you can't apply the style until it's appropriate to do so. For example, if you create a paragraph style while you're in a blank draw document, you don't see the paragraph style in the stylesheet palette until you create a text frame. You create a custom style by collecting formatting information from any of the following: 1 an element in a text, draw, or spreadsheet document (such as text or objects) 1 a style that's already on the stylesheet palette 1 the document controls you'd normally use to format text and objects (such as the tools, palettes, ruler, paragraph controls, and menu commands) To add a custom style to the stylesheet palette, click on the Default button bar (or choose Show Stylesheet from the Window menu) to show the stylesheet palette. Then click the New button on the stylesheet palette. In the New Style dialog box, set the options you want, and then click OK. * Choose Index from the or Help menu and scroll to the entry. Then choose a topic from the list and click Go To Topic.