sobota, 18 grudnia 2010

Rules of DTP: Lesson 2: Space After Paragraphs

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Lesson 2: Space After Paragraphs
Jacci Howard Bear
From Jacci Howard Bear, your Guide to Desktop Publishing

Return to Sender?
In our first lesson we banished one of the most common carryovers from typewriting that plague desktop-published documents. Today, we'll tackle another spacing issue rooted in typewriter usage. This is a feature of page layout software that has also migrated, somewhat, to high-end word processing software.

Don't Use Double Hard Returns After a Paragraph
With today's word processors and page layout applications it is possible to precisely control the amount of space between paragraphs. There is no longer a need for the old typewriter style of putting double hard returns to separate paragraphs (in computer terms that would be the equivalent of using the enter key to add space between lines). Learn how and why to do it with paragraph formatting.


Pages in this Lesson
1: Hard Returns

2: Paragraph Formatting

3: Assignment

Tips, Trivia, Tidbits
Entering the Time Warp
If you aren't old enough to have ever used a manual typewriter (the kind that didn't plug in to an electrical outlet) you may not realize the origins of the word return or carriage return, often applied to the Enter key on a standard computer keyboard. Yes, it means to return to the other side of the page. But it's because on manual typewriters the top part of the typewriter (the carriage that included the roll that held the paper) would physically move as you typed. There was a little lever you had to push when you got to the end of the line that would return the carriage to the starting postion and roll it up a little so you could start typing the next line. Pushing the return lever twice would cause the paper to roll up an extra line - to create space between paragraphs.

Previous Lessons in this Class
Lesson 1: Space After Punctuation


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Jacci Howard Bear
Desktop Publishing Guide
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