2
Table Of Contents
- User’s Guide
- Contents
- Welcome to Pages
- Overview of Pages
- Creating a Document Using the Pages Templates
- Formatting a Document’s Layout and Table of Contents
- Setting Page Orientation and Size
- Setting Page Margins
- Creating Columns
- Varying Column and Page Layouts
- Creating a Document With Left- and Right-Facing Pages
- Adding Headers, Footers, Page Numbers, Footnotes, and Endnotes
- Varying Document Formatting Using Section Breaks
- Adding a Repeated Background Image
- Using a Table of Contents
- Formatting Text and Paragraphs
- Working With Styles
- Working With Graphics andOther Media
- Changing Object Properties
- Creating Tables
- Adding a Table
- Using Table Cells and Borders
- Formatting Tables
- Adding Images or Background Colors
- Formatting Numbers
- Sorting Cells
- Autofilling
- Using Formulas
- A Tour of Using Formulas
- Adding a Quick Formula
- Removing a Formula
- Using the Formula Editor to Add and Edit Formulas
- Using Cell References
- Adding a Formula to Multiple Cells
- Performing Arithmetic Operations
- Using Predefined Functions
- Operators and Functions for Advanced Table Formula Users
- Defining Formulas That Use Operators
- Defining Formulas That Use Functions
- Creating Charts
- Personalizing Documents With Address Book Data
- Printing and Exporting Your Document to Other Formats
- Designing Your Own Document Templates
- Index
Chapter 2 Creating a Document Using the Pages Templates 43
Note: Some media files are protected under copyright law. And some downloaded
music may be played only on the computer where the download occurred. Make sure
you have permission to use the files you want to add.
To open the Media Browser:
m Click Media in the toolbar (or choose View > Show Media Browser), then choose
iPhoto, iTunes, or Movies to display the kind of files you want to use.
When you add an object to your document, you can either place it in a fixed position
on the page (called a fixed object), so that the text flows around it as you type; or
anchor it to the text (called an inline object), so that it moves with the text around it. If
you create a fixed object, you can adjust how tightly you want the text to flow around
it by adjusting the text wrap. To learn more about fixed versus inline objects, see
“Fixed Objects Versus Inline Objects” on page 124. For more information about text
wrapping, see “Wrapping Text Around an Object” on page 136.
To add an image inline with the text:
m Place the insertion point where you want the image to appear, and then choose Insert
> Choose. Select the graphics file and click Insert.
m Command-drag an image from the iPhoto pane of the Media Browser to where you
want it to appear in the text flow. As you drag the image over the text, the insertion
point indicates where the image will appear if you drop it.
m Command-drag an image from the Finder to where you want it to appear in the text
flow. As you drag the image over the text, the insertion point indicates where the
image will appear if you drop it.
To add a fixed image:
m Click outside the text areas in the document so that no insertion point is visible,
choose Insert > Choose, and then select the graphics file and click Insert.
m Drag an image from the iPhoto pane of the Media Browser to the document and
position it where you want it.
m Drag an image from the Finder to the document and position it where you want it.
To change an image from fixed to inline or vice versa:
1 Click Inspector in the toolbar, and click the Wrap Inspector button.
2 Select “Moves with text” to make the image inline. Select “Fixed on page” to make the
image fixed.










