1.4

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Word Spacing: Set the space between each word in a text in measure or
percentage. This is equivalent to the word-spacing property in CSS.
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Whitespace: Specify how the text wraps. See CSS White-Space for details. This is
equivalent to the white-space property in CSS.
l the style of the text
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Bold: Sets the font-weight to 700.
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Italic: Sets the font-style to italic.
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Underline: Sets the text-decoration to underline.
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Strikethrough: Sets the text-decoration to line-through.
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Subscript: Sets the vertical-align to super.
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Superscript: Sets the vertical-align to sub.
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Capitalize: Sets the text-transform to capitalize.
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Uppercase: Sets thetext-transformto uppercase.
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Lowercase: Sets thetext-transformto lowercase.
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Small-caps: Sets the font-variant to small-caps.
Note
All settings in the Text Formatting dialog are in fact CSS style rules. When you change
one or more settings, the selected text gets wrapped in a Span element that has an inline
style tag containing the selected setting(s). Click the Advanced button to add CSS
properties and values to the inline style tag of the Span directly. For more information
about CSS, see "Styling and formatting" on page 217.
Formatting a paragraph
Through the Paragraph Formatting dialog you can set the line height and first indent, among
other things. It also lets you add spacing and a border; see "Spacing" on page 241 and
"Border" on page 233.
To open the Paragraph Formatting dialog, select a paragraph (see: "Selecting an element" on
page 76) or place the cursor in a paragraph, and then select Format > Text.
On the Formats tab you can set:
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Line-height: Specify the height of each line in the paragraph's text, in a measure or
percentage. Note that this is not the spacing between lines, but rather the complete height
of the line itself including the text. This is equivalent to the line-height property in
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