I'm a little confused. Why doesn't it wrap under itself? Or what do you mean
by "under itself"? If you've got something like this:
Company Data:
Company Name: Very Very Very Long Company Name Here Which Should
Wrap Under Itself
Company Address: Address Block
Then is the *first* line separable (as a heading)? If not, I'd insert line
breaks as needed, then insert tab characters to take text to a tab set at
the appropriate location. It's a kludge, but it's the only way I know of.
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site:
http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so
all may benefit.
"Chip Orange" wrote in message
...
Thanks, but nothing that easy. The second one is usually something like:
Company Name: Very Very Very Long Company Name Here Which Should Wrap
Under
Itself But It Doesn't ...
"Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message
...
What determines where the second hanging indent begins? If it follows a
line
break, then perhaps you could substitute a paragraph break and use two
separate paragraphs, with different formatting?
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the
newsgroup
so
all may benefit.
"Chip Orange" wrote in message
...
Exactly, thanks so much Suzanne for explaining it, and I apologize for
not
being clearer.
We've so far tried using a 2 column table to achieve the first hanging
indent; the left column is rather narrow and holds the beginning of the
paragraph (that's outdented), and the right column holds the remaining,
indented, part of the paragraph. Within this right-hand column we
format
the paragraph as a hanging indent, to achieve the twice indented
portion
of
the last part of the paragraph.
The places where we use this aren't always suited to tables, so I was
hoping
there was a better way to do this.
Thanks.
Chip
"Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message
...
No, that would be a double indent (and it's a "block quote," not a
"pull
quote," which is something else entirely). A double hanging indent, I
would
guess, is one that has a hanging indent on the second line and then
another,
larger left indent somewhere below that. I don't believe there's any
good
way to achieve this in Word. In WordPerfect, there is a command
(Ctrl+F7)
to
"create a hanging indent here." You insert the code, and it resets
the
left
indent at that point until you change it, which you can do later in
the
same
paragraph.
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the
newsgroup
so
all may benefit.
"Dawn Crosier, Word MVP" wrote in message
...
Format your paragraph with an indent on both the right and left
side.
I'm
guessing that you are really talking about a "pulled quote".
(Format
|
Paragraph)
--
Dawn Crosier
Microsoft MVP
"Education Lasts a Lifetime"
This message was posted to a newsgroup, Please post replies and
questions
to the group so that others can learn as well.
"Chip Orange" wrote in message
...
We have recently converted a large document operation from
WordPerfect
to
Word. We have documents formatted whose layout had been aided by
a
WP
feature that allowed us to do a "double hanging indent".
We can't find a way to do something similar in Word, so we've been
redesigning documents into tables to use tabular columns in place
of
a
hanging indent inside of a hanging indent.
Is this the only/best way to achieve this kind of layout?
Thanks.
Chip
s