1.7

Table Of Contents
1.
On the Resources pane, expand the Contexts folder, expand the folder of the
corresponding context and then right-click the section (or right-click the Web context).
2.
Click the tab Includes.
3.
From the File types dropdown, select Stylesheets.
4. The list at the left displays the style sheets that are present in the template's resources.
The list at the right shows the style sheets that will be included in the output of the current
section (or Web sections, if you have selected the Web context). Use the Include and
Exclude buttons to move files from one list to the other.
5.
Click one of the included CSS files and use the Up and Down buttons to change the
order in which the style sheets are read.
Note: Moving a style sheet up in the list gives it less weight, because style sheets read
later will override previous ones in case of conflicting rules.
Styling text and paragraphs
There are numerous ways to format text in a template. You can apply a certain font, make text
bold, transform it to uppercase, center it, color it, etc.
This topic explains how to apply local formatting to text. It is recommended though, to format
text using style sheets; see "Styling and formatting" on page488 and "Styling templates with
CSS files" on page490.
Formatting text and paragraphs locally
An intuitive way of formatting text locally is by using the toolbar buttons: select some text, or an
element that contains text (see: "Selecting an element" on page411) and click one of the
toolbar buttons to make it bold, center it, create a numbered or bulleted list, etc.
To quickly change a paragraph into a Heading, Address or Pre element, select the paragraph
(see: "Selecting an element" on page411) and on the Format menu, select the appropriate
element.
More local formatting options are available in the Formatting dialogs; see below.
Formatting text
To open the Text Formatting dialog, select some text and then select Format > Text. In the Text
Formatting dialog you can set:
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