Formatting paragraphs in Word
Formatting
Paragraphs
Formatting a
paragraph usually entails changing its shape. You may be squeezing it in with
indents or stretching it out with additional line spacing. Other kinds of
formatting change a paragraph’s very nature, like adding a border or making it
part of a numbered or bulleted list. The Paragraph formatting group (Home →
Paragraph) is right next door to the Font group (Figure
4-6). You don’t need to select text
to format a paragraph; just make sure the insertion point is in the paragraph
you want to format. However, if you want to format several paragraphs at once,
select them all before you apply a command.
Figure 4-6. Paragraph formatting
commands are in the Home → Paragraph group. Left to right, from the top, you
find buttons to add bullets and numbers, apply indents, sort paragraphs, show
the paragraph mark, align paragraphs, adjust line spacing, change the
background color, and add borders.
Aligning Text
It’s
easy to apply alignment to text. With your insertion point in the paragraph you
want to change, click one of the alignment buttons in the Paragraph group on
the Home Tab. For example, Home → Paragraph → Left sets the current paragraph’s
alignment. As shown in Figure 4-7, you have four
choices when it comes to aligning your paragraphs:
·
Left (Alt+H, AL).
Aligns the lines in the paragraph flush on the left side and ragged on the
right. Left alignment is standard for letters, reports, and many business
documents.
·
Centered (Alt+H, AC).
Centers each line in the paragraph, leaving both left and right margins ragged.
This setting is appropriate for headings and short chunks of text, as in
invitations and advertisements. Avoid using centered text for long paragraphs,
since it’s hard for readers’ eyes to track from the end of one line to the
beginning of the next when the left margin is uneven.
·
Right (Alt+H, AR).
Aligns the lines in the paragraph flush on the right side and ragged on the
left. This unusual alignment is most often used for setting captions or
quotations apart from the main text.
·
Justified (Alt+H, AJ).
Adds space between letters and words so that both the left and right sides of
the paragraph are straight and flush with the margins. Justified margins give
text a more formal look suitable for textbooks or scholarly documents. If your
justified text looks odd because big gaps appear between the letters or words,
try using a long line—that is, putting more characters per line. You can do
this by extending the margins (Alt+P, M) or by changing the size of your font
(Alt+H, FS).
Indenting Paragraphs
One
of the most common reasons for indenting a paragraph is to set off quoted
text from the rest of the document. Usually, you move the paragraph’s left edge
in about a half inch from the left margin. Word makes it easy to indent text in
this way. Just use the Increase Indent button on the ribbon (shown back
in Figure 4-6) or the
shortcut Alt+H, AI. If you change your mind and want to remove the indent, use
the companion command Decrease Indent (Alt+H, AO).
The
ribbon buttons handle most everyday indentation chores, but what if you need to
customize your indents? To do that, open the Paragraph dialog box to the
Indents and Spacing tab (Alt+H, PG), and you see the Indentation tools in the
middle of the tab (Figure 4-8).
Indenting Paragraphs
One
of the most common reasons for indenting a paragraph is to set off quoted
text from the rest of the document. Usually, you move the paragraph’s left edge
in about a half inch from the left margin. Word makes it easy to indent text in
this way. Just use the Increase Indent button on the ribbon (shown back
in Figure 4-6) or the
shortcut Alt+H, AI. If you change your mind and want to remove the indent, use
the companion command Decrease Indent (Alt+H, AO).
The
ribbon buttons handle most everyday indentation chores, but what if you need to
customize your indents? To do that, open the Paragraph dialog box to the
Indents and Spacing tab (Alt+H, PG), and you see the Indentation tools in the
middle of the tab (Figure 4-8).
Figure 4-8. The Paragraph box is
divided into four sections. From the top you see: General, Indentation,
Spacing, and Preview. As you adjust your paragraph formatting using tools from
the first three groups, you see the changes take place in an example paragraph
in the Preview window.
The
indentation tools in the Paragraph box let you set indents with much more
precision than the simple Increase and Decrease buttons. For one thing, you can
indent your paragraph from both margins using the Left and Right text boxes.
Type a number in the box or use the arrow buttons to make an adjustment. Look
in the Preview window at bottom to get a sense of the changes you’re making.
Spacing Between
Paragraphs
For
documents like business letters or reports that use block-style paragraphs,
there’s usually a little space between each. You can adjust this spacing
between paragraphs to set off some blocks of text from the rest.
Use
the Paragraph dialog box (Figure 4-8) to adjust the
distance between paragraphs. On the left, you can enter numbers to set the
space before the paragraph and the space after. With body text paragraphs, it’s
good to set the same, relatively small distance before and after—say, three
points. For headers, you may want to put a little extra space before the header
to distance it from the preceding text. That space makes it clear that the
header is related to the text beneath it. Generally speaking, the more
significant the header, the larger the type and the greater the spacing
around it.
Spacing Between Lines
In
the Paragraph box, to the right of the paragraph spacing controls, you
find the “Line spacing” tools. Use these controls to set the distance between
lines within paragraphs. You have three presets and
three custom settings:
·
Single keeps
the lines close together, with a minimum amount of space between. Single
spacing is usually easy to read, and it sure saves paper.
·
1.5 lines gives
your text a little more breathing room, and still offers a nice professional
look.
·
Double is
the option preferred by teachers and editors, so there’s plenty of room for
their helpful comments.
·
At least is
a good option if you have a mix of font sizes or include inline graphics
with your text. This option ensures that everything fits, as Figure
4-9 illustrates.
·
Exactly puts
you in control. Type a number in the At box, and Word won’t mess with that
setting.
·
Multiple is
the oddball of the bunch. Think of Multiple as a percentage of a single line
space: 1=100 percent; .8=80 percent; 1.2=120 percent; and so on.
Figure 4-9. Line spacing
controls the space between lines within a paragraph. These examples show the
same paragraph, with two different settings. All the type is set to 11 points
except for the word “by,” which is 24-point type. Top: Using the “At least”
option with 12 points entered in the At box, this setting adjusts so that the
oversized word fits. Bottom: Using the Exactly option with 12 points in the At
box, the b and y get clipped off.
Inserting Page Breaks
and Line Breaks
Some
things just look wrong, such as a heading at the bottom of a page with no text
beneath it. That heading should be at the top of the next page. Sure, you could
force it over there with a page break (Ctrl+Enter), but that can cause trouble
if you edit your text and things move around. You could end up with a page
break in some weird spot. The solution is to adjust your Line and Page Break
settings so that headings and paragraphs behave the way you want them to.
On
the Paragraph box’s Line and Page Breaks tab (Figure 4-10), you can
adjust how paragraphs handle these breaks. The behavior becomes part of
the paragraph’s formatting and travels with the text no matter where you
move the text or breaks. The keyboard shortcut to get there is Alt+H, PG,
Alt+P. You can use four settings:
·
Widow/Orphan control. Single
lines abandoned at the top (widows) or bottom (orphans) of the page look out of
place. Turn on this checkbox, and Word keeps the whole family, er, paragraph together.
·
Keep with next.
Certain paragraphs, like headings, need to stay attached to the paragraph that
comes immediately after them. Choose the “Keep with next” option for your
headings, and they always appear above following paragraph.
·
Keep lines together.
Sometimes you have a paragraph that shouldn’t be split between two pages, like
a one-paragraph quote or disclaimer. Use this option to keep the paragraph as
one unit.
·
Page break before.
Use this command with major headings to make sure new sections of your document
start on a new page.
Figure 4-10. Use the Line and
Page Break settings to control the appearance of your text and to avoid awkward
transitions between pages.
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