2015

Table Of Contents
1
The callout switches to the settings defined in the Default callout style. An icon
displays next to the callout style's name in the Callout Styles palette when the callout
anchor is selected.
2
If the error condition still occurs, QuarkXPress applies the No Style settings to the
callout and it is positioned at its last valid location.
3
If the application cannot find a valid location, it turns runaround off for the callout.
When QuarkXPress turns off a callout's runaround this way, it also places this visual
indicator on the callout:
To view visual indicators, check View > Visual Indicators.
To turn runaround back on for such a callout, on Windows use the Runaround tab of
the Modify dialog box (Item menu) or the drop-down menu in the Runaround tab
of the Measurements palette.
Working with tables
In QuarkXPress, a table is a distinct item, like a text box, picture box, text path, or
line. When working with tables, you can pretty much think of a cell as an individual
picture box, text box, or no-content box, and you can handle cells in much the same
way you handle these other items. To work with elements of the table itself such
as rows and columns use the Table menu.
Drawing a table
To draw a table and specify its properties, do the following:
1
Select the Tables tool from the Tool palette, drag to draw a rectangle that is roughly
the size of the final table, and then release the mouse button. The Table Properties
dialog box displays.
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.
100 | A GUIDE TO QUARKXPRESS 2015
BOXES, LINES, AND TABLES