A Guide to QuarkXPress 10.
CONTENTS Contents About this guide.............................................................................16 What we're assuming about you..........................................................................16 Where to go for help............................................................................................16 Conventions..........................................................................................................17 Technology note.........................................
CONTENTS Layers palette................................................................................................................41 Lists palette...................................................................................................................42 Measurements palette...................................................................................................43 Measurements palette - Mac OS X...............................................................................
CONTENTS Locking box and picture proportions............................................................................68 Reshaping boxes...........................................................................................................69 Adding frames to boxes................................................................................................69 Applying colors to boxes..............................................................................................
CONTENTS Formatting tables..........................................................................................................91 Formatting gridlines......................................................................................................91 Inserting and deleting rows and columns.....................................................................92 Combining cells.............................................................................................................
CONTENTS Kerning manually.........................................................................................................118 Kerning automatically..................................................................................................118 Controlling hyphenation and justification...........................................................119 Specifying hyphenation exceptions............................................................................121 Using discretionary hyphens...........
CONTENTS Anchoring boxes and lines in text...............................................................................149 Cutting, copying, pasting, and deleting anchored boxes and lines...........................149 Unanchoring boxes and lines......................................................................................149 Working with OpenType fonts...........................................................................149 Applying OpenType styles.............................................
CONTENTS Cropping pictures.......................................................................................................198 Rotating and skewing pictures....................................................................................198 Coloring and shading pictures....................................................................................199 Flipping pictures..........................................................................................................
CONTENTS Proofing color on screen (soft proofing)......................................................................216 Color management for experts...................................................................................216 Creating a source setup..............................................................................................217 Creating an output setup............................................................................................217 Managing profiles................
CONTENTS Updating lists..............................................................................................................239 Working with indexes.........................................................................................239 Specifying the index marker color...............................................................................239 Creating index entries.................................................................................................
CONTENTS Notes.............................................................................................273 Creating notes....................................................................................................273 Working with notes............................................................................................274 Opening and closing notes.........................................................................................274 Showing and hiding notes..........................
CONTENTS Adding interactivity to ePub eBooks..................................................................306 Adding audio to an ePub eBook.................................................................................306 Adding video to an ePub eBook.................................................................................306 Adding hyperlinks and anchors to an ePub eBook.....................................................307 Creating a TOC for ePub or Kindle..................................
CONTENTS Working with multiple languages..................................................351 Applying a character language...........................................................................351 Changing the program language........................................................................352 XTensions software.......................................................................353 Working with XTensions modules.......................................................................
CONTENTS Super Step and Repeat XTensions software.......................................................377 Using Super Step and Repeat.....................................................................................377 Table Import XTensions software.......................................................................378 Type Tricks..........................................................................................................379 Make Fraction................................................
CONTENTS Preferences — Application — Job Jackets.................................................................402 Preferences — Application — Notes..........................................................................402 Preferences — Application — PDF.............................................................................403 Preferences — Application — Redline........................................................................403 Preferences — Application — Spell-Check......................
ABOUT THIS GUIDE About this guide You do not need to read the QuarkXPress® documentation from beginning to end. Instead, use this guide to quickly look up information, find out what you need to know, and get on with your work.
ABOUT THIS GUIDE Conventions Formatting conventions highlight information to help you quickly find what you need. • Bold type style: The names of all dialog boxes, fields, and other controls are set in bold type. For example: "Click OK." • References: In descriptions of features, parenthetical references guide you in accessing those features. For example: "The Find/Change dialog box (Edit menu) lets you find and replace text.
ABOUT THIS GUIDE custom modules for QuarkXPress. QuarkXTensions® (Quark® XTensions software) also provide a modular approach for meeting your particular publishing needs. And if you can write AppleScript® scripts, you can use this scripting language from Apple® to automate many QuarkXPress activities. 18 | A GUIDE TO QUARKXPRESS 10.
THE USER INTERFACE The user interface Skimming through the QuarkXPress user interface, you will find that many commands are familiar or self-explanatory. Once you become familiar with QuarkXPress menus and dialog boxes, you will discover that keyboard commands and palettes offer convenient access to features that you can also access through menus. Tools The Tools palette A GUIDE TO QUARKXPRESS 10.
THE USER INTERFACE The Tools palette includes the following controls: • Use the Item tool to select, move, resize, and reshape items (boxes, lines, text paths, and groups). When the Item tool is not selected, you can press Command/Ctrl to temporarily access the Item tool. • Use the Text Content tool to draw text boxes and work with text in boxes. • Use the Text Linking tool to link text boxes. • Use the Text Unlinking tool to unlink text boxes.
THE USER INTERFACE • Use the Pan tool to reposition the active layout. You can use key commands to declare the box content type as you draw using the Rectangle Box tool: Press R while drawing to declare Picture content or press T while drawing to declare Text content. To change the content type of an existing box, right-click on the box and choose Content > Text, Picture or None For more information about Bézier boxes and lines, see "Creating Bézier boxes" and "Creating Bézier lines.
THE USER INTERFACE Tool Windows Mac OS X Remove Point tool P P Convert Point tool P P Scissors tool P P Select Point tool P P Freehand Drawing tool P P Table tool G G Zoom tool Z Z Pan tool X X Menus The topics below describe the menus and menu items available in QuarkXPress. QuarkXPress menu (Mac OS X only) The QuarkXPress menu is a part of QuarkXPress for Mac OS X.
THE USER INTERFACE • New: Choose an option from the New submenu to create a project. If you choose New Project from Ticket, you can select a Job Ticket from which you can create the project. You can also use this submenu to create new libraries and books. • Open: Use this option to open project files. • Open Recent: Use this option to open a project from a list of recently opened files. • Close: Use this option to close the active project. • Save: Use this option to save the active project.
THE USER INTERFACE • Delete (Windows only): Deletes the active content. • Select All: Selects all content in the active box or text path. • Show Clipboard (Windows only): Displays the contents of the clipboard. • Find/Change: Displays the Find/Change palette, which you can use to find and change text based on content, formatting, or both. • Item Find/Change: Displays and hides the Item Find/Change palette. • Preferences (Windows only): Lets you modify default values and settings.
THE USER INTERFACE • Output Styles: Lets you add, edit, and delete output style definitions. Output styles let you easily switch between different sets of output options. For more information, see "Working with output styles." • Mojigumi: Lets you add, edit, and delete Mojigumi sets and classes. For more information, see "Working with mojigumi sets and classes." • Non-Breaking Character Sets: Lets you add, edit, and delete rules for two-byte character sets.
THE USER INTERFACE • Story Direction: Lets you specify horizontal or vertical story direction for the selected text box. • Rubi: Lets you control rubi characters applied to text. • Group Characters: Lets you place horizontal text in a vertical story. • Alignment: Lets you align active paragraphs to the left, right, or center. Also lets you justify or force-justify selected paragraphs. • Character Alignment: Lets you align active characters to the top, center, baseline, or bottom.
THE USER INTERFACE • Shade: Lets you set the intensity of an applied color. • Opacity: Lets you control the transparency of a selected picture. • Halftone (Windows only): Lets you apply a halftone screen pattern to a selected grayscale picture. • Stretch Picture To Fit Box: Reduces or enlarges the selected picture horizontally and vertically to fill its picture box. • Scale Picture To Box: Reduces or enlarges the selected picture proportionately to fill its picture box.
THE USER INTERFACE • Runaround (Windows only): Lets you specify whether text runs inside, outside, or through a picture or its picture box. • Clipping (Windows only): Lets you select the clipping type for a given item and control its outset. • Duplicate: Lets you create a copy of an item and its contents. • Step and Repeat (Windows only): Lets you duplicate an active item multiple times and in any position you specify.
THE USER INTERFACE • Convert Text To Boxes: Lets you convert the contents of a selected text box to a Bézier box. • Edit: Lets you modify item shape, runaround, or clipping path. • Flip Shape: Lets you flip a Bézier shape in its frame either vertically or horizontally. • Share: Lets you access sharing properties of an item and synchronize or re-use content such as text, pictures, boxes, lines, and Composition Zones.
THE USER INTERFACE Layout menu The Layout menu includes commands for working with and navigating to layouts. • New: Lets you add a new layout. • Duplicate: Lets you duplicate one layout to copy its items and content to another. • Delete: Lets you remove a layout. • New/Edit Layout Specification: Lets you create or modify Job Jackets properties for a layout. • Layout Properties: Lets you modify layout properties such as name, type, and size.
THE USER INTERFACE • Repeat As Footer: Lets you specify a footer row to repeat automatically in continued instances of a table. • Convert Text to Table: Lets you convert text that has already been imported or typed into a text box to a table. This works best with text that is delimited in some way to indicate how to divide the information into columns and rows. • Convert Table: Lets you convert the information in a table to text or to a group of related boxes.
THE USER INTERFACE • Hide Selection: Allows you to put QuarkXPress into a mode where selections are not indicated visually in the document (no text highlighting, no handles), but the selection is still honored by QuarkXPress. • Page Grids: Displays nonprinting gridlines defined for the master page on which the active layout page is based. • Text Box Grids: Displays nonprinting gridlines applied to text boxes. • Snap to Guides: Lets you quickly align items with guides so items will snap to the nearest guide.
THE USER INTERFACE Utilities menu The Utilities menu includes the following commands: • Insert Character: Lets you easily insert special characters, including special breaking and nonbreaking spaces. • Check Spelling: Use the submenu to display the Check Spelling palette to check the spelling of a word, a selection of text, a story, a layout, or all master pages in a layout. • Auxiliary Dictionary (Windows only): Lets you specify an auxiliary dictionary for use in spell checking.
THE USER INTERFACE • Linkster: Displays the Linkster dialog box. For more information, see " Linkster XTensions software." • ShapeMaker: Displays the ShapeMaker dialog box. For more information, see " ShapeMaker XTensions software." • Remove Manual Kerning (Windows only): Lets you remove all manual kerning applied between characters, or remove kerning from a kerning pair.
THE USER INTERFACE • Tile Vertically (Windows only): Tiles all open windows vertically to fit on the screen. • Arrange Icons (Windows only): Minimizes all active projects. • Close All (Windows only): Closes all active projects. • Palette Sets: Use the submenu to store and recall arrangements of palettes. • Turn Hiding On (Mac OS X only): Allows you to display and hide groups of docked palettes. • Advanced Image Control: Displays and hides the Advanced Image Control palette.
THE USER INTERFACE • Style Sheets: Displays and hides the Style Sheets palette. • Tools: Displays and hides the Tools palette. • Welcome Screen: Displays the welcome screen. In addition, this menu includes an item for every open window. You can use these menu items to easily switch between windows. Help menu The Help menu provides access to the online help. This menu includes the following commands: • Search Use this command to search the local help file.
THE USER INTERFACE also hide groups of docked palettes by choosing Window > Turn Hiding On. Docked palettes contain snaps giving a unified look to the application. In the document window, the resize (+) button can be used to unsnap / snap a window to the palettes. A splitter is added between the window and palette edges so that resizing the palette also resizes the window. Due to its width, the Measurements palette can only be docked horizontally to the upper or lower edge of the screen.
THE USER INTERFACE Colors palette The Colors palette lets you view and apply colors defined in the active project. The buttons at the top of this palette let you create, edit, and delete colors. Users create colors through the Colors dialog box (Edit > Colors). For more information, see "Working with colors." The Colors palette lets you view and apply colors. Conditional Styles palette The Conditional Styles palette lets you work with conditional styles.
THE USER INTERFACE The Content palette provides access to items in the shared content library. Books palette The Books palette allows you to work with books. The buttons at the top of this palette let you create and open books and add, edit, and delete chapters in books. For more information, see "Working with books." The Books palette lets you work with books. Glyphs palette The Glyphs palette gives you easy access to every character in each font on your computer.
THE USER INTERFACE The Glyphs palette gives you easy access to every character in every font. Grid Styles palette A grid style is a named package of settings that describe a grid — like a style sheet for a design grid. You can apply grid styles to text boxes and can use them as the basis for master page grids. You can also base grid styles on other grid styles. Grid styles are displayed in the Grid Styles palette (Window menu). For more information, see "Working with grid styles.
THE USER INTERFACE Guides palette The Guides palette lets you work with guides. For more information, see "Using the Guides palette." HTML5 Palette The HTML5 palette lets you create and configure movies, slideshows, buttons, and more for App Studio issues. For more information, see A Guide to App Studio. Index palette The Index palette lets you tag text for indexing. When you create an index, all of the tags you created with the Index palette are automatically turned into a customizable index.
THE USER INTERFACE The Layers palette lets you work with layers and the objects on those layers. Lists palette The Lists palette helps you view and generate lists. This feature is useful for creating things like tables of contents. You can create lists in the Lists dialog box (Edit > Lists). The List Name drop-down menu lets you choose from among the lists defined in the active project and the Update button lets you refresh the list currently displayed in the palette.
THE USER INTERFACE Measurements palette With the Measurements palette (Window menu), you can quickly edit many commonly used controls. Options in the Measurements palette change to reflect the selected tool or item. When you select multiple items of the same type (such as three separate picture boxes), the Measurements palette controls apply to all selected items. The Measurements palette displays a row of icons called the navigator tab above the center of the palette.
THE USER INTERFACE • Text Box tab: Contains controls allowing you to set the text attributes of the currently selected text box. • Picture Box tab: Contains controls allowing you to set the picture attributes of the currently selected picture box. • Clipping tab: Contains controls allowing you to set the clipping attributes of the currently selected picture box. • Frame tab: Contains controls allowing you to set the frame attributes of the currently selected box.
THE USER INTERFACE • Composition Zones tab: Contains controls allowing you to set the attributes for the currently selected composition zone . • Component tab: Contains controls allowing you to set the attributes of the currently selected component. When you select a picture box that contains an image, the number next to the Effective Image Resolution icon in the Home tab of the Measurements palette displays the effective resolution of the image.
THE USER INTERFACE • Grids tab: Contains controls from the Grid tab of the Modify dialog box. (selected tables only). • Drop Shadow tab: Contains controls from the Drop Shadow tab of the Modify dialog box. • Tabs tab: Contains controls from the Tabs tab of the Paragraph Attributes dialog box. When you select a picture box that contains an image, the number next to the Effective Image Resolution icon in the Classic tab of the Measurements palette displays the effective resolution of the image.
THE USER INTERFACE The top portion of the palette lets you create, duplicate, and delete master pages. To view and edit a master page, double-click it; the master page displays in the active project window. A single-sided master page displays as a rectangle, while a facing-page master page displays with two folded corners. The bottom portion of the palette lets you navigate through the pages in the active layout. To go to a layout page, double-click in this portion of the palette.
THE USER INTERFACE Reflow Tagging palette The Reflow Tagging palette lets you tag content in Reflow view. For more information, see "Working with Reflow view." Scale palette The Scale palette lets you perform advanced scaling operations. For more information, see "Scale XTensions software." Style Sheets palette The Style Sheets palette (Window > Show Style Sheets) enables you to apply character and paragraph style sheets by clicking style sheet names.
THE USER INTERFACE Using palette groups The Palette Groups feature lets you combine several palettes into one. This palette group shows the Colors, Advanced Image Control, and Style Sheets palettes attached as one, which economizes space while providing easy access to functions. (Windows only)To attach a palette to a palette group, Control+click/right-click the title bar of a palette group and choose an unchecked palette name.
THE USER INTERFACE To create a palette set, first display all of the palettes you will need for a particular task and hide all other palettes. Then choose Window > Palette Sets > Save Palette Set As to display the Save Palette Set As dialog box, enter a name, and optionally assign a key command. To retrieve a palette set, choose Window > Palette Sets > [name of palette set] or press the keyboard combination for that palette set.
THE USER INTERFACE Views and view sets QuarkXPress gives you multiple ways to view your layouts. You can split a window or create a new window to show two different layouts, or two different views of the same layout. You can use Story Editor view to concentrate on text without having to look at the layout. And the View Sets feature lets you create and easily switch between different view options.
THE USER INTERFACE • Choose Window > Split Window > Remove All. • Click the close button in the top right corner of the window. Creating a window To create a new window that displays the active project, choose Window > New Window. If you open multiple windows for a project, make changes to that project, and then begin closing the windows, the application will not prompt you to save the project until you attempt to close the last window that displays the project.
THE USER INTERFACE see "View menu.") The View Sets feature lets you store and recall different combinations of these settings.
THE USER INTERFACE View Sets palette View sets are saved at the application level. However, any view settings you apply to a layout using view sets are saved with that layout. 54 | A GUIDE TO QUARKXPRESS 10.
PROJECTS AND LAYOUTS Projects and layouts QuarkXPress files are referred to as projects, and each project contains one or more layouts. Every layout is stored within a project, and every project contains at least one layout. Each layout can contain as many as 2,000 pages, and can be as large as 48" x 48" in size (or 24" x 48" for a two-page spread). A project can contain an unlimited number of layouts.
PROJECTS AND LAYOUTS New Project dialog box for Print layout type Every QuarkXPress project contains at least one layout. Therefore, when you create a project, you must specify a default layout for the file. You can use the default layout name or enter a new name for the layout in the Layout Name field. To indicate the type of the default layout, choose Print, App Studio, or ePub from the Layout Type drop-down menu. For more information about App Studio layouts, see A Guide to App Studio.
PROJECTS AND LAYOUTS Use the Default Story Direction controls to specify horizontal or vertical direction for the layout. The Facing Pages check box lets you create spreads. In a project with a horizontal default story direction, the Allow Odd Pages On Left check box lets you control whether you can have odd pages on the left. In a project with a vertical default story direction, the Allow Odd Pages On Right check box lets you control whether you can have odd pages on the right.
PROJECTS AND LAYOUTS dialog box displays. You can use this dialog box to change a project's layout type, but you cannot change a layout to or from an App Studio layout type. (For more information, see A Guide to App Studio.) To delete a layout, display the layout, then choose Layout > Delete or choose Delete from the Layout tab context menu.
PROJECTS AND LAYOUTS • (Windows only)Tracking settings (Utilities > Kerning Table Edit) (Print layouts only) • (Mac OS X only)Tracking settings (Edit > Font Tracking Tables) (Print layouts only) • Hyphenation exceptions (Utilities > Hyphenation Exceptions) • Zoom values Working with guides Guides are nonprinting guidelines that help you to line up items and text in a layout. There are three types of guides: Ruler guides, column and margin guides and Dynamic guides.
PROJECTS AND LAYOUTS Measurements palette is open when you drag a ruler guide, the guide's position is indicated in the X field (for vertical ruler guides) or the Y field (for horizontal ruler guides). • If, as you create a horizontal ruler guide, you release the mouse button when the ruler guide is positioned over the pasteboard, the ruler guide will extend across the pasteboard and all the pages in the spread.
PROJECTS AND LAYOUTS • Select Align to Center of Item to display guide lines that are generated when the center of items are aligned with the center and/or edges of other items.These are generated when you create and move items. • Select Align to Edges of Item to display guide lines that are generated when the edges of items are aligned with the edges of other items.These are generated when you create and move items.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Boxes, lines, and tables To create a successful page layout, you need an orderly way to arrange text and pictures — you need boxes. Boxes are items that can contain text or pictures; they can even be created to contain no content at all, perhaps to create colorful design elements on a page. Box boundaries give text and pictures a specific shape, size, and placement on a page.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Understanding handles The bounding boxes of selected text paths, lines, and boxes have small white squares called item handles. You can use these handles to resize and rotate a selected item. Item handles To resize an item, click and drag its item handles. To rotate an item, click and drag just outside one of the item's corner handles.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Picture content handles display even if the selected picture exceeds the size of its box (see illustration above). The picture displays beyond the box boundary. You can crop the image by resizing the picture box. You can use picture content handles to resize or rotate a picture without changing the size or angle of its picture box.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES can be manipulated independently, usually to form a sharp transition between the two segments: Examples of corner points Smooth point: A smooth point connects two curved lines to form a continuous curve. The curve handles always rest on a straight line through the point, but they can be distanced independently: A smooth point Symmetrical point: A symmetrical point connects two curved lines to form a continuous curve.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES When the Select Point tool is positioned over an active Bézier box or line, various pointers display indicating whether you can select a point, the curve handles, or a line segment. Click and drag using the pointers to reshape the Bézier box or line. • To change the shape entirely, choose a different option from the Item > Shape submenu. • To add a point to a Bézier box while working with the Bézier Pen tool segment. Alternatively, you can use the Add Point tool , click a line .
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES To constrain rectangular boxes to squares and oval boxes to circles, press Shift while you drag. You can create boxes with the following tools: To change a no-content box into a text box, press Command+E/Alt+E and import a text file. To change a no-content box into a picture box, press Command+E/Alt+E and import a picture file.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES When any of the drawing tools are active, you can press Command/Ctrl to temporarily switch to the Select Point tool. When the Select Point tool is active, you can press Command+Option/Ctrl+Alt to temporarily switch to the Item tool. You can join, extend or close existing open paths. For more information see "Joining, extending and closing open paths". Resizing boxes You can resize any box by modifying the size of its bounding box.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES The proportion lock controls in the unlocked (top) and locked (bottom) states To lock the proportions of the picture in the selected box, display the Home/Classic tab of the Measurements palette and click the proportion lock control next to the X% and Y% fields. If this control is locked, QuarkXPress maintains the picture's aspect ratio during resizing operations. On Windows, you can also lock box proportions in the Picture tab of the Modify dialog box.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES You can also create your own frame styles in the Dashes and Stripes dialog box (Edit menu) and specify frame settings in an Item Style. For more about Item Styles, see "Item Styles XTensions software." Applying colors to boxes To apply a background color to active boxes, do one of the following: • (Windows only) Choose Item > Modify (Command+M/Ctrl+M), click the Box tab, and then use the controls in the Box area.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Merging and splitting boxes Options in the Merge or Split Paths submenu (Item menu) let you create complex Bézier boxes from existing boxes. For example, if a rectangular box overlaps an oval box, you can select the submenu and choose an option that will create a single box with the same content. If you merge two picture boxes, one picture will display in the combined box. If you merge two text boxes, the text flows as one story through both boxes.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES by choosing File > Import and selecting a picture. You can change a picture box to a text box by choosing File > Import and selecting a text file. To convert a selected text box to a text path, choose a line shape from the Item > Shape submenu. When you select a Box tool, you can use the following modifier keys to create text or picture boxes: • Press T as you draw to create a text box. • Press R as you draw to create a picture box.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES • To make a corner point, press Option/Alt before you click. If you click and hold, you can control the radius of the corner point by dragging a curve handle. • To add a point to an existing segment of the shape, click the line segment where you want the point to be. • To delete a point from the active shape while you are drawing it, click the point. 4 To finish the line, double-click.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES the L (Length) field. To precisely change the length of a line, enter a value in the L field, then press Return/Enter. You can resize any Bézier line by modifying the size of its bounding box. To do so, make sure Item > Edit > Shape is unchecked, and then resize the line as if it were a box. Reshaping lines You can change the shape of a line in the following ways: • You can change the shape entirely by choosing a different option from the Item > Shape submenu.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Joining, extending and closing open paths You can click an endpoint of an existing shape and it selects that point and goes into regular draw mode, so the next click adds a new point and a segment to the selected line. You can add as many segments as you need. Double-click and endpoint to finish the line as an open path. Click an opposite endpoint to close the path (just like during the original draw operation).
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES • Manually moving items using the Item tool . If you hold down the mouse before moving a box or text path, you can see the contents as you move the item. You can also "nudge" items by selecting the Item tool and pressing an arrow key on your keyboard. The box's item handles demarcate the bounding box. The best way to view the bounding box clearly is to use the Item tool to select item handles on a Bézier box.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES cut, copy, duplicate, and perform a number of other functions on a group. For example, you can group all the items that compose a publication masthead; once grouped, you can modify or move the entire group as you would a single box, line, or text path. After you create a group, you can still edit, resize, and reposition individual items while maintaining the group relationship. You can also place a copy of a group into an open QuarkXPress library for use in other documents.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES The Super Step and Repeat feature is useful for laying out design elements that contain a number of evenly spaced copies of an item. Create multiple copies of an item and specify the distance between them using the Super Step and Repeat command (Item menu). For another way to make uniquely shaped boxes, see " ShapeMaker XTensions software.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Skewing items To skew active items within bounding boxes: • (Windows only) Choose Item > Modify (Command+M/Ctrl+M); then click the Box tab. Enter a value in the Skew field. • Enter a value in the Box Skew field on the Home/Classic tab of the Measurement palette. Positive values slant items to the right; negative values slant them to the left. Locking and unlocking items Locking lets you protect items and content from accidental changes.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Understanding callouts A callout is a floating box that always displays on the same page or spread as the content it pertains to. Each callout is anchored to a particular spot in a text story called a callout anchor. A callout anchor flows along with text like a character. When a callout anchor moves to a new page or spread, the callout moves with it. When guides are displayed, a line links each callout anchor with its associated callout (if any).
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Settings for a callout with a fixed horizontal location and a variable vertical location It is important to note that the settings for a callout are stored with its callout anchor, not with the callout itself You can control the positioning of a callout by configuring its callout anchor directly, or by applying a callout style to the callout anchor. A callout style is a named package of callout settings that displays in a palette.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Callout Styles palette You can think of callout styles as similar to style sheets (for more information, see "Working with style sheets"). Like style sheets and other resources, callout styles can be managed with Job Jackets (for more information, see "Job Jackets"). A callout anchor can be selected or unselected. When a callout anchor is selected, it has a red outline and its callout style (if any) is selected in the Callout Styles palette.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Selected callout anchor 3 Select the item or group that you want to make into a callout. 4 Choose Item > Callout Anchor > Associate with Callout Anchor. The item or group becomes a callout, and a line displays between the callout and the callout anchor. Callout anchor associated with a callout 5 Configure the callout anchor.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES If you choose Spread from the Align callout horizontally relative to drop-down menu and specify a horizontal offset, that offset is inverted on left-facing pages. This allows you, for example, to configure a callout to always be .25" inside of the inside margin; on a right-facing page, such an offset moves the callout to the right, but on a left-facing page the offset must move the callout to the left.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES You can edit the Default callout style, but you cannot delete it. Callouts and runaround If a callout with runaround causes its callout anchor to move, this can lead to an error state. For example, if a callout's runaround pushes its callout anchor to the next page, the callout moves to the next page — which allows the callout anchor to return to the previous page, which causes the callout to return to the previous page, and so on.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES The Table Properties dialog box 2 Specify the number of horizontal rows in the Rows field, and specify the number of vertical columns in the Columns field. 3 To specify the default cell type, click Text Cells or Picture Cells in the Cell Type area. Later, you can select specific cells and convert the content type if needed. 4 If you want to create text cells that expand as you add text, use the controls in the Auto Fit area.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Converting text to tables The success of converting text to a table depends on the text preparation itself. It's important that paragraphs, tabs, spaces, or commas (the characters QuarkXPress can convert) are used consistently in a text block, because these characters are used in the table conversion to define rows and columns. It's common for users to use multiple tab characters in a word processor to align columns of data — rather than setting appropriate tab stops.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Importing Excel tables Table data often originates in a spreadsheet program such as Excel, and you can import table data just as you import pictures. Although the technique is slightly different, the results are the same: The table in QuarkXPress is linked to the Excel file for tracking and updating. You can import both .xls and .xlsx files.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES The Table Link dialog box 4 Click Browse to locate and select an Excel file to import. 5 If the file includes multiple worksheets, choose the one you want to import from the Sheet drop-down menu. If you want to import only a portion of the data, you can specify a cell range in the Range field or choose a named range from the drop-down menu. 6 In the Options area, check the attributes you want to import. 7 Click OK. Formulas and references are not imported.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES Adding text and pictures to tables When working with tables, think of a table cell as a text box or a picture box. Each box contains content — text that may or may not be linked to the next cell, an individual picture, or nothing (maybe just a blend). Therefore, you can add content to tables much as you add content to boxes — by typing text, importing text, or importing pictures. Converting text cells to picture cells is the same as converting a text box to a picture box.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES controlling text flow in linked cells. In addition to linking table cells to each other, you can link cells to and from text boxes and text paths. • To link all the cells in a table, check Link Cells in the Table Properties dialog box when you create the table. • To link selected cells in a table, choose Table > Link Text Cells. All but the first cell in the selection must be empty. • To manually link table cells, use the Linking tool .
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES • Choose an option from the Select submenu of the Table menu: Horizontal Grids, Vertical Grids, Border, or All Grids. 2 Once the appropriate gridlines are selected, on Windows, choose Item > Modify, and then click the Grid tab. The Grid tab of the Modify dialog box 3 To select all gridlines, vertical gridlines, or horizontal gridlines, click one of the buttons to the right of the Preview area.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES menu (such as Odd Rows). Then, choose Table > Delete > Row or Table > Delete > Column. If Maintain Geometry is checked in the Table menu and you delete a column or row, existing columns or rows increase in size to fill the space of the deleted columns or rows. If Maintain Geometry is unchecked, the table becomes smaller as necessary. Combining cells To combine cells, Shift+click a rectangular selection of cells with the Text Content tool . Choose Table > Combine Cells.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES There are two ways to continue tables: • Anchoring the table in a text box. This is the preferred way to break a table in most situations, because it is easiest to use • Breaking the table manually. This method is necessary when you break a table horizontally (for example, if you want to put the first five columns of a table on one page and the remaining three columns on a different page). When tables are continued, you may still need a legend to explain what's in the table.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES The Table Break Properties dialog box 2 Check Width to break the table when its width exceeds the value in the field. By default, the current width of the table displays in the Width field — decreasing this value will break the table. 3 Check Height to break the table when its height exceeds the value in the field. By default, the current height of the table displays in the Height field — decreasing this value will break the table.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES A broken table with a continued header The Table Break feature works in both directions: it continues the table using additional sub-tables as necessary if the table gets larger and recombines tables as necessary if the table gets smaller. To sever the links between continued tables, select any instance of the continued table and choose Table > Make Separate Tables.
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES • Choose Table > Table Break. The Table Break Options dialog box displays. To set the number of header and footer rows, enter values in the Header Rows and Footer Rows fields, respectively. Table Break Properties dialog box for anchored table To create a secondary header that displays in portions of a table after the first, check Continued Header.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Text and typography Text is an integral part of nearly every publication. QuarkXPress lets you create and edit text directly in your publications or import text from most popular word processing applications. In addition to the standard text formatting and editing features, QuarkXPress includes such features as finding and changing text and its attributes, spell checking, custom spelling dictionaries, and a font usage utility for making project-wide changes to text formatting.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Importing and exporting text To import text, do one of the following: • Select the Text Content tool , place the text insertion point where you want text to be inserted, and then choose File > Import. Check Convert Quotes option to convert double hyphens to em dashes and convert foot or inch marks to typesetter's apostrophes and quotation marks. Check Include Style Sheets to import style sheets from a Microsoft Word or WordPerfect file or convert "XPress Tags" to formatted text.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY To avoid import problems, uncheck Allow fast saves (in the Save tab of the Options dialog box) in Microsoft Word or use the Save As command to create a copy of the Word file to be imported. Importing and exporting text with Unicode options You can specify an encoding type when importing text and exporting text. The encoding type specifies the byte sequence used to represent each glyph in text.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Use the Find/Change dialog box to search for and replace text. To search and replace based on formatting attributes, uncheck Ignore Attributes. Special character codes You can use special character codes to find/change special characters. You can also use these codes when creating conditional styles. Code Character Tab \t New paragraph \p New line \n New column \c New box \b Backslash \\ Punctuation space \. Flex space \f Discretionary hyphen* \h Indent here \I D
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Code Character Zero width space \z Word joiner* \j Conditional style marker (Find/Change \r only) *Not applicable in conditional styles. Checking spelling To check spelling, choose an option from the Utilities > Check Spelling submenu. The Check Spelling palette displays. Check Spelling palette To change the scope of the spell check, choose an option from the Check drop-down menu. The options are Word, Selection, End Of Story, Story, or Layout.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY To replace a misspelled word, type the correct spelling in the Replace With field or choose the correct word from the list, then click Replace. To replace all occurrences of the misspelled word, click Replace All. To look up suggestions for the word in the Replace With field, click Look up. To skip the selected word, click Skip. To add the word in the Replace With field to an auxiliary dictionary, click Add.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Counting words and characters To display a count of the words and characters in a story, choose Utilities > Word and Character Count. Word and Character Count dialog box The Word Count area displays the number of total and unique words in the story. The Character Count area displays the total number of characters and specific language characters.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Press Command+Option+Shift+M/Ctrl+Alt+Shift+M to jump directly to the font field in the Measurements palette, enter the first few characters of the font name until it is recognized, then press Return/Enter. Your most recently used fonts display at the top of the font list. (Windows only):To display font previews in font menus, check the Show in Font Menu box in the Fonts pane of the Preferences dialog box (QuarkXPress/Edit menu). Press Shift to temporarily override this preference.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Choose a type style from the Text Styles drop-down menu in the Measurements palette. Apply bold and italic type styles using the icons to the left of the Text Styles drop-down menu. To remove all styles from selected text, choose Remove All Styles from the Text Styles drop-down menu. Intrinsic fonts are distinct font styles built into font families, such as “Times New Roman MT Std Bd” in the “Times New Roman MT Std” font family.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY You cannot apply horizontal and vertical scaling values simultaneously. Mac OS X • Condense 5%: Command+[ • Expand 5%: Command+] • Condense 1%: Command+Option+[ • Expand 1%: Command+Option+] Windows • Condense 5%: Ctrl+[ • Expand 5%: Ctrl+] • Condense 1%: Ctrl+Alt+[ • Expand 1%: Ctrl+Alt+] Applying baseline shift You can place characters above or below their baseline without affecting paragraph spacing. A positive value raises the text; a negative value lowers the text.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Windows, these options are also available in the Emphasis Mark drop-down menu in the Character Attributes palette (Style > Character). Controlling half-width characters To keep half-width characters (such as Roman characters) horizontal in a vertical story: • (Windows only) Check the Keep Half-Width Characters Upright box in the Character Attributes dialog box (Style > Character) .
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Baseline Shift: Specify a value to raise or lower the font from its baseline. • Scale Direction: Specify whether the font is scaled horizontally or vertically. • Scale Amount: Specify the amount of horizontal or vertical scaling. The Sample Text area of the dialog box displays sample text that uses each of the fonts in the font set. You can apply a font set to text in the same way that you apply a font to text.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Red represents the em box. Yellow represents the ICF box. You can align smaller characters with the largest characters that appear in the same line of text in one of following ways: • Choose an option from the Style > Character Alignment submenu. • (Windows only): Choose Style > Formats and choose an option from the Char Align drop-down menu under the Formats tab. • (Mac OS X only): Choose an option from the Char Align drop-down menu on the Paragraph tab of the Measurements palette..
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Examples of horizontal character alignment A GUIDE TO QUARKXPRESS 10.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Examples of vertical alignment Applying multiple character attributes You can view and edit all character attributes at one time using the Character Attributes dialog box (Style > Character) on Windows, or by using the Paragraph tab of the Measurements palette on Mac OS X. Blank fields and gray check boxes indicate that multiple styles are applied to selected text. For example, if the Font field is blank, then more than one font is applied to the selected text.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Use the Character Attributes dialog box to format text. Applying paragraph attributes Paragraph attributes are formatting options that apply to a paragraph as a whole. They include alignment, indents, leading, and tab settings. To apply attributes to selected paragraphs, use the Paragraph/Paragraph Attributes tab of the Measurements palette and on Windows you can also use the Paragraph Attributes dialog box (Windows only) (Style > Formats).
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Use one of the keyboard commands below.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY In addition to setting hanging indents as a paragraph attribute, you can enter a special character that forces the indenting of all lines of text from that point to the next paragraph return. Press Command+\ (Mac OS X) or Ctrl+\ (Windows) to enter a special Indent Here character. (The Indent Here character is an invisible character; to view invisible characters, choose View > Invisibles (Command+I/Ctrl+I.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Increase .1 pt: Command+Option+Shift+" Windows • Decrease 1 pt: Ctrl+Shift+: • Decrease .1 pt: Ctrl+Alt+Shift+: • Increase 1 pt: Ctrl+Shift+" • Increase .1 pt: Ctrl+Alt+Shift+" Controlling space before and after paragraphs Space Before and Space After controls let you specify the amount of space before and after selected paragraphs.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Controlling widow and orphan lines Widows and orphans are two kinds of typographically undesirable lines. Traditionally, a widow is defined as the last line of a paragraph that falls at the top of a column. An orphan is the first line of a paragraph that falls at the bottom of a column.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY To apply a non-breaking character set to a paragraph, choose one from the Non-Breaking Char Set drop-down menu in the Edit Hyphenation & Justification dialog box (Edit > H&Js > Edit). Controlling kerning Kerning is the adjustment of space between character pairs. Because of their shapes, certain character pairs look better when kerned. You can use automatic kerning, and you can also use manual kerning controls to specify additional kerning between characters.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY associated kerning value for each pair in the table. You can't change a font's kerning table, but you can create a custom kerning table for any font using the Kerning Table Edit dialog box (Utilities menu). You can use this dialog box to customize both horizontal (With-Stream) and vertical (Cross-Stream) space in kerning pairs. You can create your own kerning tables in QuarkXPress.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Hyphenation Zone: Specify the area before the right indentation in which hyphenation can occur. For example, if you set the hyphenation zone to .05", the word is hyphenated when an acceptable hyphenation point falls within .05" of the right indentation. The word preceding the hyphenated word must not fall within the hyphenation zone. • Hyphenation Zone: For words containing Roman characters, specify the area before the right indentation in which hyphenation can occur.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • R Char: Specify the minimum and maximum amount of space between Roman characters in justified paragraphs. Specify the optimum amount of space between Roman characters in all paragraphs, regardless of their alignment. • Flush Zone: Specify the area before the right indentation within which the last word in the last line of a justified paragraph must fall in order to justify that line.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY These are general rules; appropriate tracking values depend on the design, font, column width, and other factors. Tracking manually To apply tracking to selected text, do one of the following things: • (Windows only) : Choose Style > Track, enter a value in the Track Amount field, and then click OK. • Use the Track Amount controls in the Measurements palette. • Use one of the keyboard commands below.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY You can apply sending to characters that do not have Chinese, Japanese, and Korean language applied to them. Simply check the Apply Sending to Non-CJK Characters box in the Character Attributes dialog box (Edit > Character) (Windows only), or in the Character tab of the Measurements palette (Mac OS X only). Working with style sheets A style sheet is a group of paragraph attributes, character attributes, or both that can be applied to selected paragraphs and characters in one step.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Use the Edit Paragraph Style Sheet dialog box to configure a paragraph style sheet. First, configure the controls in the General tab: • Name: Enter a name in this field, or the application will use a default "New Style Sheet" name. • Keyboard Equivalent: To define a keyboard command for the style sheet, enter one in the Keyboard Equivalent field. You can enter any combination of Command, Option, Shift, or Control/Ctrl or Ctrl+Alt, along with a function or keypad key.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Style: To associate a character style sheet with the paragraph style sheet, choose an option from the Style drop-down menu in the Character Attributes area. To create a character style sheet, see "Creating and editing character style sheets." Next, use the Formats, Tabs, and Rules tabs to specify additional attributes for your paragraph style sheet. When you're done, click OK to return to the Style Sheets dialog box, then click Save to save the style sheet.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Use the Edit Character Style Sheet dialog box to configure a character style sheet. First, configure the controls in the General tab: • Name: Enter a name in this field, or the application will use the default "New Style Sheet" name. • Keyboard Equivalent: To define a keyboard command for the style sheet, enter one in the Keyboard Equivalent field. You can enter any combination of Command, Option, Shift, or Control/Ctrl or Ctrl+Alt, along with a function or keypad key.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Applying style sheets To apply a style sheet to selected text, do one of the following things: • Choose the style sheet name from the Style > Paragraph Style Sheet submenu or the Style > Character Style Sheet submenu. • Display the Style Sheets palette (Window menu) and then click the style sheet name in the palette. • Use the keyboard command (if any) displayed next to the style sheet name in the Style Sheets palette.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Appending style sheets To import paragraph and character style sheets from a different article or project, choose File > Append, navigate to the target article or project file, then display the Style Sheets pane and import the style sheets you want. If a style sheet from the source file has the same name as a style sheet in the target project, but is defined differently, the Append Conflict dialog box displays. You can use this dialog box to determine how such conflicts are handled.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY A conditional style that produces the above formatting Once you've captured these rules in a conditional style, you can style a run of text by simply selecting it and then clicking the conditional style's name in the Conditional Styles palette. Conditional Styles palette It is important to understand that conditional styles are applied at the paragraph level. Each paragraph can have only one conditional style applied to it.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY example) the series at the beginning of the story includes a rule with an End of the Story reference. Creating a conditional style To create a conditional style: 1 Choose Edit > Conditional Styles. The Conditional Styles dialog box displays. 2 Click New. The Edit Conditional Style dialog box displays. Edit Conditional Style dialog box 3 Enter a name for the conditional style in the Name field.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY The option selected in the fifth column controls whether all of these options are available in this column. 7 In the fourth column, indicate how many occurrences of the option in the fifth column to apply to or through. 8 In the fifth column, choose which entity to jump or format to or through: • Cursor Position: Choose this option to apply a paragraph style sheet to the current location without moving.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY 10 To make the rules repeat, check Repeat Conditional Style At and choose an option: • Text: Choose this option to repeat when a particular chunk of text is found, then enter the target text in the field. • Character: Choose this option to repeat when a particular character is found, then enter the character in the next column. If you want to repeat at each instance of one of several characters, enter all of them with no characters between them.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Note that once you have applied a conditional style to text, that text will continue to be automatically formatted until you remove the conditional style. To remove a conditional style from a paragraph, select the paragraph or place the text insertion point in the paragraph, then click No Conditional Style in the Conditional Styles palette.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Conditional style that uses conditional style markers 3 Apply the conditional style to the text. Each article is automatically formatted. Text with conditional style applied Editing a conditional style There are two ways to edit a conditional style: • Choose Edit > Conditional Styles, select the conditional style, and then click Edit. • Select the conditional style in the Conditional Styles palette and click Edit .
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Bullets and numbering Rather than using manually created and formatted bullets and numbers, you can create bulleted and numbered lists with bullet styles, numbering styles, and outline styles. A bullet style describes how a bullet should look, how far it should be from the text, and how it should be aligned. A numbering style describes how a number should look, what format it should have, how far it should be from the text, and how it should be aligned.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Edit Bullet Style dialog box To control how the bullet is styled, choose an option from the Character Style drop-down menu. Choose Inherit from Paragraph to use the paragraph's character formatting for the bullet, or choose a character style sheet to use that character style sheet's formatting. Enter the actual bullet character or characters in the Bullet Characters field.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • By choosing an outline style that uses the bullet style from the •/123 menu in the Paragraph/Paragraph Attributes tab of the Measurements palette. If you do it this way, the bullet's position is controlled by the outline style. For more information, see "Working with outline styles." • Associate the bullet style with a paragraph style sheet, then apply that style sheet to the text. For more information, see "Bullets, numbering, outlines, and style sheets.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Numbering alignment and offset works the same way bullet alignment and offset works. For more information, see "Working with bullet styles." You can apply a numbering style in three ways: • Choose the numbering style's name from the •/123 menu in the Paragraph/Paragraph Attributes tab of the Measurements palette. If you do it this way, the numbers are positioned to the left of the paragraph's first line indent by its Outset value.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY cumulatively; if level 1 has a 6 pt indent and level 2 has a 6 pt indent, a paragraph at level 2 is indented by 12 pt. Outline style indents are applied on top of paragraph indents. If a paragraph has a left indent of 12 pt, and the indent for an outline style's first level is 6 pt, a paragraph at level 1 would visually be indented by 18 pt. Each level can have a bullet or numbering style, or neither.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY the number outset, the application moves the paragraph text to the right so that there is always this much distance between the number and the text. • (Mac OS X only):The Minimum Bullet/Number Distance from Textparagraph attribute can be found on the Paragraph tab of the Measurements palette.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Associating a bullet, numbering, or outline style with a paragraph style sheet When you apply this style sheet to a paragraph, the bullet, numbering, or outline style will also be applied. Positioning text in text boxes The topics below cover several ways to control the vertical and horizontal positioning of text in text boxes. Using baseline grid QuarkXPress versions 7.0 and earlier included a feature called Baseline Grid.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Top: In top-aligned text boxes, lines of text are positioned in the box with the top of the first line positioned as specified in the First Baseline area. • Centered: In center-aligned text boxes, lines of text are centered between the First Baseline's ascent and the bottom of the text box. • Bottom: In bottom-aligned text boxes, lines of text are positioned with the last line flush with the bottom of the box.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Controlling font usage To view and replace fonts, display the Fonts pane of the Usage dialog box (Utilities menu). This pane lists all fonts used in the active project. To replace every occurrence of a font, select the font name, click Replace, and choose a replacement font. If a font is listed in the Fonts tab (Utilities > Usage) as [Name of Font] preceded by a negative number, the system you are using does not have that font installed.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Runaround is a great way to make a page visually distinctive. Running text around all sides of an item To run text around all sides of an item, select a text box with either the Text Content tool or the Item tool , and then: • (Windows only): Display the Text tab of the Modify dialog box (Item menu), and then check Run Text Around All Sides • (Mac OS X only): Use the Text Box tab of the Measurements palette. The Run Text Around All Sides preference is set by default.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Running text around text boxes To apply text runaround to a text box in front of another text box, select the front text box, and then: • (Windows only): Choose Item > Runaround, and then choose an option from the Type drop-down menu: • Choose None to run text behind an active text box. • Choose Item to run text around an active text box. If the text box is rectangular, enter values in the Top, Left, Bottom, and Right fields to outset or inset the runaround area.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Choose Same As Clipping to set the text runaround path to the clipping path selected in the Clipping tab. • Choose Picture Bounds to run text around the rectangular "canvas area" of the imported picture file. This includes any white background areas saved with your original picture file. Enter values in the Top, Left, Bottom, and Right fields to determine the outset or inset of the text from the picture's boundaries.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY 2 Noise lets you specify the smallest allowable closed path. Any closed path smaller than the noise value is ignored. Noise values are useful for cleaning up runaround paths and making them easier to output. 3 Smoothness lets you control path accuracy. A lower value creates a more complex path with a greater number of points. A higher value creates a less accurate path. 4 Threshold determines how "white" is defined. All pixels defined as "white" are excluded.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY To add text to a line or path, select the Text Content tool and double-click the line or path. To control the way text rides the selected text path: • (Windows only) Display the Text Path tab of the Modify dialog box (Item menu), and then click a button in the Text Orientation area to choose how the text should ride the path.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Using anchored boxes You can paste boxes and lines of any shape in text, which makes them act like characters and flow with text. This is especially helpful when text reflows, because anchored items reflow like other characters in the text. If items are not anchored and text reflows, they become displaced, and can end up overlapping text. Anchoring boxes and lines in text When you anchor an item, it behaves like a character flowing in text.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY letters, lowercase letters, numerals, and punctuation are all characters. A glyph is actually an image that represents a character, possibly in different forms. For example, a standard numeral 1 is a character, whereas an old-style numeral 1 is a glyph. As another example, an "f" and an "I" next to each other are characters, whereas an "fi" ligature is a glyph. A one-to-one relationship does not always exist between characters and glyphs.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY OpenType styles available in the Character Attributes dialog box A GUIDE TO QUARKXPRESS 10.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY OpenType styles include the following: • Standard Ligatures: Apply ligatures that are designed to enhance readability and are in standard use. • Discretionary Ligatures: Apply ligatures that are not in standard use. This feature covers the ligatures that may be used for special effect at the user's preference. • Tabular Figures: Apply equal widths to numbers. • Proportional Figures: Apply unequal widths to numbers.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Quarter Widths: Replace glyphs set on other em widths with glyphs set on quarter-em widths. Proportional Alternate Widths: Fit glyphs to individual, proportional widths. • Alternate Forms: Apply alternate glyph forms, such as JIS2004, JIS78, JIS90, Simplified, and Traditional. These glyph forms are specially designed for some Japanese OpenType fonts. Using ligatures There are two methods for using ligatures: The legacy method or the OpenType method.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY can access such a character map in the Glyphs palette (Window menu), which enables you to view all the glyphs in the selected font, view bold or italic glyphs, double-click a glyph to insert that glyph in text, and save favorite glyphs for easy access. The Glyphs palette makes it easy to work with large character sets and professional-quality fonts. To view the glyphs in a font, display the Glyphs palette (Window menu) and choose a font from the Font menu in the upper-left corner.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Displaying invisible characters The Invisibles option (View menu) is always helpful when editing text or fine-tuning typography because it allows you to see common "invisible characters" such as spaces, tabs, and paragraph returns. Inserting special characters There are all kinds of special characters for typographic and formatting purposes. You can enter such special characters using keyboard commands or choose them from the Utilities > Insert Character submenu.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY the Hiragino font to that character. If the application cannot find an active font that contains the character, the character still displays as a box or symbol. Font Fallback is implemented as an application preference, meaning that the feature is either on or off for your copy of the program. The feature is on by default, but if you need to turn it off, uncheck Font Fallback in the Font Fallback pane of the Preferences dialog box (QuarkXPress/Edit > Preferences).
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY If you need to change, delete, or share font mapping rules, choose Utilities > Font Mapping. You can use the Fonts pane (QuarkXPress/Edit > Preferences) to specify a default replacement font and to control whether the Missing Fonts alert displays when you open a project with missing fonts. For more information, see "Preferences — Application — Fonts.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY In the horizontal story direction, a line in a design grid includes a bottomline, a baseline, a centerline, a topline, and a full cell box. In the vertical story direction, a line in a design grid includes a leftline, a baseline, a centerline, a rightline, and a full cell box. Master page grids and text box grids There are two kinds of default design grids: Master page grids and text box grids. Every page and every text box has a design grid associated with it.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY A page with its master page grid displayed, with all grid lines showing. A page with its master page grid displayed, with only full cell boxes showing. A GUIDE TO QUARKXPRESS 10.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY A text box with its text box grid displayed, with all grid lines showing. A text box with its text box grid displayed, with the baseline and full cell boxes showing. For more information, see "Using a master page grid." To use the baseline grid feature as it existed in QuarkXPress and QuarkCopyDesk 7.x and earlier, show the baseline and hide the other grid lines. Grid styles A grid style is a named package of settings that describe a grid — like a style sheet for a design grid.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Design grid basics The following topics explain how to work with design grids. For information about grid styles, see "Working with grid styles." Configuring a master page grid To configure a master page grid, display a master page and then choose Page > Master Guides & Grid. The Master Guides & Grid dialog box displays. Use the Master Guides & Grid dialog box to control master page grids.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Under Column Guides, enter a value in the Columns field to specify the number of columns on the master page. Enter a value in the Gutter Width field to define the space between columns. • The Content Dimensions field displays the area inside the margin guides. • To control the placement and spacing of the grid, use the controls in the Text Settings tab. For more information, see "Design Grids: Text Settings tab.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • To control the alignment of cells, use the controls in the Cell Alignment tab. For more information, see "Design grids: Cell Alignment tab." • To specify which grid lines display, use the controls in the Display Settings tab. For more information, see "Design grids: Display Settings tab." • To preview changes as you make them, check Preview. • To use the specifications of an existing master page grid, grid style, or style sheet, click Load Settings.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Font Size: Enter a size to determine the height of each line in a design grid. This value also determines the full cell height and width. • Vertical Scaling: Enter a percentage value to adjust the height of each line in a design grid, based on the font size. • Font Scaling: Choose Horizontal or Vertical and enter a percentage of the font size in the field. If you choose Horizontal, this value determines the full cell width.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Adjust: Click to display the Adjust Lines Within Margins dialog box for master page grids, or the Adjust Lines Within Box dialog box for text box grids. For more information, see "Adjust Lines Within Margins dialog box." • Lines within margin or Lines within box: This field displays the number of lines that can fit on a page or in a box, based on the settings above. • Cells per line: This field displays the number of cells that can fit on a line, based on the settings above.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY is 12 pt, and vertical font scaling is 100%, when you click + next to Font Size, the Lines per page value increases to 51 and the Font Size value decreases to 11.765 pt. • Enter values in the Cells per line and Lines per page fields to change the number of cells and lines on a page. When you click Adjust Margins, changes to the Cells per line and Lines per page fields affect the Content Height and Content Width values.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Use the Adjust Lines Within Box dialog box to adjust grid settings for an active text box. • Enter values in the Cells per line and Lines in Box field to change the number of cells and lines in the active box. • The increment bars display a percentage (from 0 to +1) to indicate the fraction by which a grid pattern does not fit in the box. If the Cells per line or Lines in Box increments align perfectly, the increment bar displays 0.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY If you check Preview before displaying the Adjust Lines Within Box dialog box, you can view the results of changes when you close the dialog box. Design grids: Display Settings tab A design grid includes separate lines to indicate the topline, the centerline, the baseline, and the bottomline. A design grid includes separate lines to indicate the topline, the centerline, the baseline, the bottomline, and the full cell box.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY • Choose a cell shape from the Shape drop-down menu. • Master Guides & Grid dialog box only: To specify the master page grid boundaries, choose Within Margins, To Page, or Pasteboard from the Show Grid drop-down menu. Design grids: Cell Alignment tab Use the Cell Alignment tab to specify how cells are aligned within the grid.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Select a grid style, style sheet, or master page in the Load Settings dialog box. 2 Choose All, Grid Styles, Master Pages, or Paragraph Style Sheets from the Show drop-down menu. 3 Select an existing grid style, style sheet, or master page from the list, and then click OK. The specifications in the grid style, style sheet, or master page you load are displayed in the Master Guides & Grid, Grid Settings, or Edit Grid Style dialog box.
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY Grid style with "Body Copy" style sheet loaded If you load a style sheet for a grid style, you can specify that future changes to the style sheet update the grid style automatically by checking Link to Paragraph Style Sheet