2023

Table Of Contents
User Guide | 234
Last Line Indent
While building Table for Contents (TOC), it was not possible to define an indent
spacing specifically for page numbers. As a result, if the Table of Contents
contained multi-line chapter/section headings, the page number would wrap
below the heading.
Last Line Indent in Table of Contents
Now, using the ‘Last Line’ indent feature, a user can specify indent spacing for
page numbers in the Table of Contents. The Last Line indent value is always
less than or equal to the Right Indent value. (For example: if Right Indent is 10
pt, the Last Line indent can be between -10 pt to 0 pt.
Controlling leading
Leading is a measure of line spacing — the distance between text baselines in
paragraphs. When you specify a leading value, it is applied to all lines in
selected paragraphs. You can specify leading by four methods:
Absolute leading sets the distance between baselines of text to a specific
value, regardless of the size of characters on the lines. For example, if you
specify an absolute leading value of 16 points for a paragraph, all baselines
will be spaced 16 points apart. When specifying absolute leading, use a value
that is the total vertical distance you want between text baselines.
Proportional leading allows you to set the leading in terms of a percentage,
dependent upon the font size. Each paragraph can then have a different
leading depending on the largest font size in the paragraph. For example, if
you specify a proportional leading value of 50% and the font size of the
tallest character in the paragraph is 36 pt., all baselines will be spaced 54
points apart (36 plus 50% of 36). Using proportional leading can solve
problems that can appear with text that contains inline graphics, inline boxes