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Format paragraphs

  1. InDesign User Guide
  2. Get to know InDesign
    1. Introduction to InDesign
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    1. Documents and pages
      1. Create documents
      2. Work with parent pages
      3. Work with document pages
      4. Set page size, margins, and bleed
      5. Work with files and templates
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      8. Add basic page numbering
      9. Number pages, chapters, and sections
      10. Convert QuarkXPress and PageMaker documents
      11. Share content
      12. Understand a basic managed-file workflow
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    2. Grids
      1. Grids
      2. Format grids
    3. Layout aids
      1. Rulers
      2. Align and distribute objects using rulers
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  4. Add content
    1. Text
      1. Add text to frames
      2. Threading text
      3. South-East Asian Scripts
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      5. Create type on a path
      6. Bullets and numbering
      7. Insert MathML to create math expressions
      8. Glyphs and special characters
      9. Text composition
      10. Text variables
      11. Generate QR codes
      12. Edit text
      13. Align text
      14. Wrap text around objects
      15. Anchored objects
      16. Linked content
      17. Format paragraphs
      18. Format characters
    2. Typography
      1. Using fonts in InDesign
      2. Kerning and tracking
      3. Scale and skew type
      4. Apply color effects to type
    3. Format text
      1. Format text
      2. Auto Style text
      3. Work with Style Packs
      4. Tabs and indents
    4. Review text
      1. Track and review changes
      2. Add editorial notes in InDesign
      3. Import PDF comments
    5. Spell check and language dictionaries
      1. Check spelling, autocorrect, and dynamic spelling
      2. Create, add, and manage dictionaries and words
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      4. Duden dictionary
    6. Add references
      1. Create a table of contents
      2. Footnotes
      3. Create an index
      4. Endnotes
      5. Captions
    7. Styles
      1. Paragraph and character styles
      2. Map, export, and manage styles
      3. Object styles
      4. Drop caps and nested styles
      5. Work with styles
      6. Leading
    8. Tables
      1. Format tables
      2. Create tables
      3. Table and Cell styles
      4. Select and edit tables
      5. Table strokes and fills
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      2. Dynamic PDF documents
      3. Bookmarks
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    10. Graphics
      1. Understand paths and shapes
      2. Draw with the Pencil tool
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      4. Apply line (stroke) settings 
      5. Compound paths and shapes
      6. Edit paths
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      8. Change corner appearance
      9. Frames and objects
      10. Align and distribute objects
      11. Linked and embedded graphics
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    11. Color and transparency
      1. Apply color
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      3. Work with swatches
      4. Mix inks
      5. Tints
      6. Understand spot and process colors
      7. Blend colors
      8. Gradients
      9. Flatten transparent artwork
      10. Add transparency effects
  5. Find and replace
    1. Find and replace text
    2. Find and replace fonts
    3. Find and replace glyphs
    4. Find and replace using GREP expressions and queries
    5. Find and replace objects
    6. Find and replace colors
    7. Search options to find and replace
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    8. Review a shared InDesign document
    9. Manage feedback
    10. Invite to edit
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      1. Publish online
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      4. Export to Adobe Express
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      10. Export to JPEG or PNG format
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      12. Supported File Formats
      13. Export and import User Settings
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      1. Print booklets
      2. Printer's marks and bleeds
      3. Print documents
      4. Inks, separation, and screen frequency
      5. Overprinting
      6. Create PostScript and EPS files
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      8. Print thumbnails and oversized documents
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      10. Prepare to print separations
  8. Extend InDesign
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      3. Capture extension in InDesign
      4. Scripting
  9. Troubleshooting
    1. Fixed issues
    2. Known issues
    3. Crash on launch
    4. Preference folder read-only issue
    5. Troubleshoot file issues
    6. Unable to export InDesign file to PDF
    7. InDesign document recovery

Adjust paragraph spacing

You can control the amount of space between paragraphs. If a paragraph begins at the top of a column or frame, InDesign does not honor the Space Before value. In such a case, you can increase the leading of the first line of the paragraph or increase the top inset of the text frame in InDesign.

  1. Select text.
  2. In the Paragraph panel or the Control panel, adjust the appropriate values for Space Before  , Space After  , and Space Between Paragraphs Having Same Style .

Note:
  • The value for Space Between Paragraphs Having Same Style will be used only if two consecutive paragraphs have same paragraph style. If the paragraph style is different then the existing value for Space Before and Space After will be used.
  • To ensure formatting consistency, change paragraph spacing in the paragraph styles you define.

Use drop caps

You can add drop caps to one or more paragraphs at a time. The drop cap’s baseline sits one or more lines below the baseline of the first line of a paragraph.

You can also create a character style that can be applied to the drop‑cap characters. For example, you can create a tall cap (also called a raised cap) by specifying a 1‑line, 1‑character drop cap and applying a character style that increases the size of the first letter.

One-character, three-line drop cap (left), and five-character, two-line drop cap (right)

Create a drop cap

  1. With the Type tool  selected, click in the paragraph where you want the drop cap to appear.
  2. In the Paragraph panel or Control panel, type a number for Drop Cap Number Of Lines  to indicate the number of lines you want the drop cap to occupy.
  3. For Drop Cap One Or More Characters  , type the number of drop cap characters you want.
  4. To apply a character style to the drop cap character, choose Drop Caps And Nested Styles from the Paragraph panel menu, and then choose the character style you created.
    Note:

    You can also use the Drop Caps And Nested Styles dialog box to align the drop cap to the text edge, reducing the amount of space on the left side of the drop cap, and adjust for drop cap letters with descenders, such as “g” and “y.” If you want to resize, skew, or change the typeface of the drop cap letter for added effect, select the letter or letters and make the formatting changes.

Remove a drop cap

  1. With the Type tool  selected, click in the paragraph where the drop cap appears.
  2. In the Paragraph panel or Control panel, type 0 for Drop Cap Number Of Lines or Drop Cap Number Of Characters.

Add rules (lines) above or below paragraphs

Rules are paragraph attributes that move and are resized along with the paragraph on the page. If you’re using a rule with headings in your document, you may want to make the rule part of a paragraph style definition. The width of the rule is determined by the column width.

The offset for a rule above a paragraph is measured from the baseline of the top line of text to the bottom of the rule. The offset for a rule below a paragraph is measured from the baseline of the last line of text to the top of the rule.

Placement of rules

A. Rule above paragraph B. Rule below paragraph 

Michael Murphy provides a video tutorial about creating special effects using paragraph rules at Paragraph Rules Rule.

Creative Curio provides an article about creative uses of paragraph rules at Creative Uses for Paragraph Rules in InDesign, Pt 1.

Add a rule above or below a paragraph

  1. Select text.
  2. Choose Paragraph Rules from the Paragraph panel menu or Control panel menu.
  3. At the top of the Paragraph Rule dialog box, select Rule Above or Rule Below.
  4. Select Rule On.
    Note:

    If you want both a rule above and below, make sure that Rule On is selected for both Rule Above and Rule Below.

  5. Select Preview to see what the rule will look like.
  6. For Weight, choose a weight or type a value to determine the thickness of the rule. For Rule Above, increasing the weight expands the rule upwards. For Rule Below, increasing the weight expands the rule downward.
  7. Select Overprint Stroke when you want to make sure that the stroke doesn’t knock out underlying inks on a printing press.
  8. Do one or both of the following:
    • Choose a color. The available colors are those listed in the Swatches panel. Select the Text Color option to make the rule the same color as the first character in the paragraph for Rule Above and the last character for Rule Below.

    • Choose a tint or specify a tint value. The tint is based on the color you specified. Note that you can’t create tints of the built-in colors None, Paper, Registration, or Text Color.

    • If you specified any line type other than solid, choose a gap color or gap tint to change the appearance of the area between dashes, dots, or lines.

  9. Choose the width of the rule. You can choose either Text (from the left edge of text to the line end) or Column (from the left edge of the column to the right edge of the column). If the left edge of the frame has a column inset, the rule begins at the inset.
  10. To determine the vertical position of the rule, type a value for Offset.
  11. To make sure that the rule above text is drawn within the text frame, select Keep In Frame. If this option isn’t selected, the rule can appear outside the text frame.
    Note:

    To make sure the paragraph rule at the top of one column aligns with the text at the top of the adjacent column, select Keep In Frame.

  12. Set left or right indents for the rule (not for text) by typing values for Left Indent and Right Indent.
  13. Select Overprint Stroke if the paragraph rule will be printed over another color and you want to avoid errors that can occur with printing misregistration. Then click OK.

Remove a paragraph rule

  1. Using the Type tool  , click in the paragraph containing the paragraph rule.
  2. Choose Paragraph Rules from the Paragraph panel menu or Control panel menu.
  3. Deselect Rule On and click OK.

Ways to control paragraph breaks

You can eliminate orphans and widows, words or single lines of text that become separated from the other lines in a paragraph. Orphans fall at the bottom of a column or page, and widows fall at the top of a column or page. Another typographic problem to avoid is a heading that stands alone on a page with the following paragraph on the next page. You have several options for fixing widows, orphans, short exit lines, and other paragraph break problems:

Discretionary hyphens

A discretionary hyphen (Type > Insert Special Character > Hyphens And Dashes > Discretionary Hyphen) appears only if the word breaks. This option prevents the common typographic problem of hyphenated words, such as “care-giver,” appearing in the middle of a line after text reflows. Similarly, you can also add a discretionary line break character.

No Break

Choose No Break from the Character panel menu to prevent selected text from breaking across a line.

Nonbreaking spaces

Insert a nonbreaking space (Type > Insert White Space > [nonbreaking space]) between words you want to keep together.

Keep Options

Choose Keep Options from the Paragraph panel menu to specify how many lines in the following paragraph remain with the current paragraph.

Start Paragraph

Use Start Paragraph in the Keep Options dialog box to force a paragraph (usually a title or heading) to appear at the top of a page, column, or section. This option works especially well as part of a heading paragraph style.

Hyphenation Settings

Choose Hyphenation from the Paragraph panel menu to change hyphenation settings.

Edit text

Editing text may not be an option depending on the kind of document you work with. If you have license to rewrite, then subtle rewording can often create a better line break.

Use a different composer

In general, use Adobe Paragraph Composer to let InDesign compose paragraphs automatically. If a paragraph isn’t composed the way you’d like, choose Adobe Single-line Composer from the Paragraph panel menu or Control panel menu and adjust selected lines individually. See Compose text.

Control paragraph breaks using Keep Options

You can specify how many lines of the following paragraph remain with the current paragraph as it moves between frames—a convenient way to ensure that headings don’t become isolated from the body text they introduce. InDesign can highlight the paragraphs that sometimes break in violation of your settings.

You may not want to use Keep Options if your document does not require your columns to share the same last baseline.

Note:

To highlight paragraphs that violate Keep Options, choose Edit > Preferences > Composition (Windows) or InDesign > Preferences > Composition (Mac OS), select Keep Violations, and click OK.

  1. Select the paragraph or paragraphs you want to affect.
  2. Choose Keep Options in the Paragraph panel menu or Control panel menu. (You can also change keep options when creating or editing a paragraph style.)
  3. Choose Keep Options in the Paragraph panel menu. (You can also change keep options when creating or editing a paragraph style.)
  4. Select any of these options and then click OK:
    • Select Keep With Previous to keep the first line of the current paragraph with the last line of the previous paragraph.

    • For Keep With Next _ Lines, specify the number of lines (up to five) of the subsequent paragraph that the last line of the current paragraph stays with. This option is especially useful for making sure that a heading stays with the next few lines of the paragraph that follows it.

    • Select the Keep Lines Together option and select All Lines In Paragraph to prevent the paragraph from breaking.

    • Select the Keep Lines Together option, select At Start/End Of Paragraph, and specify the number of lines that must appear at the beginning or ending of the paragraph to prevent orphans and widows.

    • For Start Paragraph, choose an option to force InDesign to push the paragraph to the next column, frame, or page. If Anywhere is selected, the start position is determined by the Keep Line Settings option. For other options, they will be forced to start from these positions.

Note:

When you create paragraph styles for headings, use the Keep Options panel to make sure that your headings remain with the paragraph that follows them.

Create hanging punctuation

Punctuation marks and letters such as “W” can make the left or right edges of a column appear to be misaligned. Optical Margin Alignment controls whether punctuation marks (such as periods, commas, quotation marks, and dashes) and edges of letters (such as W and A) hang outside the text margins, so that the type looks aligned.

Before (left) and after (right) applying Optical Margin Alignment

  1. Select a text frame, or click anywhere in the story.
  2. Choose Type > Story.
  3. Select Optical Margin Alignment.
  4. Select a font size to set the appropriate amount of overhang for the size of type in your story. For optimal results, use the same size as the text.
Note:

To turn off Optical Margin Alignment for an individual paragraph, choose Ignore Optical Margin from the Paragraph panel menu or Control panel menu.

Create a paragraph border

Paragraph borders enables you to create a border around one or more paragraph. You can customize corner designs to highlight the paragraph with beautiful effects.

  1. To apply paragraph border to the text in a text frame, select the text frame or place the pointer on the text in the text frame.

  2. Do one of the following:

    • From the Control panel (Window > Control) menu, choose Paragraph Borders and Shading.
    • From the Paragraph Styles panel (Window > Styles > Paragraph Styles) menu, choose Style Options and select Paragraph Border.
    • From the Paragraph panel (Window > Type and Tables > Paragraph) menu, choose Paragraph Borders and Shading.
  3. In the Border dialog, choose the following options:

    Top:

    Specify a value of top border for a particular paragraph.  

    Left:

    Specify a value of left border for a particular paragraph.

    Bottom:

    Specify a value of bottom border for a particular paragraph.

    Right:

    Specify a value of right border for a particular paragraph.

    Type:

    Select the stroke type for paragraph border.

    Color:

    Select a stroke color for paragraph border.

    Tint:

    Specify a tint value of stroke for a paragraph border.

    Overprint:

    Select this option to apply overprint.

    Gap Color:

    Specify a color to appear in the space between dashes, dots, or multiple lines in a patterned stroke.

    Gap Tint:

    Specify a tint (when a gap color is specified).

    Cap:

    Select a cap style to specify the appearance of both ends of an open path:
        Butt cap
    creates squared ends that abut (stop at) the endpoints.
        Round cap creates semicircular ends that extend half the stroke width beyond the endpoints.
        Projecting cap creates squared ends that extend half the stroke width beyond the endpoints. This option makes the     stroke weight extend evenly in all directions around the path.

    Join:

    Specify the appearance of the stroke at corner points:
        Miter join creates pointed corners that extend beyond the endpoint.
        Round join creates rounded corners that extend half the stroke width beyond the endpoints.
        Bevel join creates squared corners that abut the endpoints.

    Corner Size And Shape:

    Select a size and shape for the corners. You can select individual size and shape for each of the four corners.

    Top (Offsets):

    Specify the value to extend border beyond the top margin.

    Left (Offsets):

    Specify the value to extend border beyond the left margin.

    Bottom (Offsets):

    Specify the value to extend border beyond the bottom margin.

    Right (Offsets):

    Specify the value to extend border beyond the right margin.

    Top Edge:

    Select the position of top edge of border for a particular paragraph.

    Bottom Edge:

    Specify the position of bottom edge of border for a particular paragraph.

    Width:

    Specify the width of border. Selecting Column spans border across text frame, selecting Text extends border across text.

    Display Border If Paragraph Splits Across Frames/Columns:

    Select this option to display a border when the text in a paragraph flows across columns or from one threaded frame to another.

    Merge Consecutive Borders And Shading With Same Settings:

    Select this option to merge the paragraph border and shading of two consecutive paragraphs, if they have same paragraph border and shading properties.

    Note:

    The borders of two consecutive paragraphs will not be affected by this option, if:

    • One of the paragraphs is in one column and does not flow across another column, and the second paragraph is in different column.
    • One of the paragraphs is in a frame and does not flow from one frame to another frame of a threaded text frame, and the second paragraph is in different frame.
  4. Check the Chain button to ensure that all offset values remain the same. If you change the value of one offset, all other values are updated.

    To create varying offset values, ensure the chain button is not selected.

  5. Click OK.

Paragraph with border

Create a shade (or color) behind a paragraph

The Paragraph Shading feature provides you with the capability to create a shade (or color) behind a paragraph.

When you shade a paragraph in a document, InDesign ensures that the shade expands and collapses as your increase or reduce the contents in the paragraph. Also, the shade moves along with the paragraph.

  1. To apply paragraph shading to the text in a text frame, select the text frame or place the pointer on the text in the text frame.

  2. Do one of the following:

    • From the Control panel (Window > Control) menu, choose Paragraph Borders and Shading.
    • From the Paragraph Styles panel (Window > Styles > Paragraph Styles) menu, choose Style Options and select Paragraph Shading.
    • From the Paragraph panel (Window > Type and Tables > Paragraph) menu, choose Shading.
  3. In the Shading dialog, choose the following options:

    Color:

    Select a color for shading.

    Tint:

    Specify the value for tint.

    Overprint:

    Select this option to apply overprint.

    Corner Size And Shape:

    Select a size and shape for the corners. You can select individual size and shape for each of the four corners.

    Top (Offsets):

    Specify the value to extend shade beyond the top margin.

    Left (Offsets):

    Specify the value to extend shade beyond the left margin.

    Bottom (Offsets):

    Specify the value to extend shade beyond the bottom margin.

    Right (Offsets):

    Specify the value to extend shade beyond the right margin.

    Top Edge:

    Select the position of top edge of shading for a particular paragraph.

    Bottom Edge:

    Specify the position of bottom edge of shading for a particular paragraph.

    Width:

    Specify the width of shading. Selecting Column spans shade across text frame, selecting Text extends shade across text.

    Clip To Frame:

    Select this option to clip shading at the edges of the frame.

    Do Not Print Or Export:

    Select this option to ignore shading if document is printed or exported to formats (such PDF, EPUB, JPEG, and PNG).

    Note:

    The Top Edge defaults to EmBox Top and the Bottom Edge defaults to EmBox bottom, respectively for the Japanese Feature set.

  4. Check the Chain button to ensure that all offset values remain the same. If you change the value of one offset, all other values are updated.

    To create varying offset values, ensure the chain button is not selected.

  5. Click OK.

The shade extends over the text in the text frame. It does not extend across the entire text frame.

Also, the Clip To Frame option is best suited for non-rectangular text frames.

 Adobe

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