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Suzanne S. Barnhill
 
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To clarify a little, the Default Paragraph Font is not a specific font; it
is the font that is defined for a particular paragraph style. If you create
a character style, it will be defined as the Default Paragraph Font plus
whatever characteristics you have given the character style, meaning that
those characteristics (bold, italic, a specific font, or whatever) will be
applied to the font of the paragraph. For more on this, see
http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Customization/DefParaFont.htm

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
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"F A L" wrote in message
...
Dear Daiya, Thanks for your tip; it worked! You are of course right in
warning me about relying on Normal; FOr my part I deeply distrust it!
Anyway, regarding character styles I have now a related but different
problem: by default all char styles are based upon "Fuente de párrafo
determinado", which is Spanish for (something like) "Default paragraph

font".
This style cannot be modified: The option "edit" (or whatever it is in the
English version) is dimmed when this particular style is selected. In

turn,
this char style seems to be based on a non existing style, "Parrafo
subrayado" (underlined paragraph: the definition of this style says:

"Fuente
del estilo de párrafo subrayado +", i.e. "Underlined paragraph style

font").
Of course I could base other char styles on other char styles, but it is
annoying not knowing what is going on: are there styles that are *so*
in-built that cannot be modified? The what is the point of such styles?

"Daiya Mitchell" wrote:

I believe that if you set the font of the child style to the same font
currently defined in the parent style (the style set as "based on), that

it
will wipe out the additional font definition, and next time you change

the
parent style, the child style will pick up the correct font. (just had

to
mess around with that the other day, in fact...)

However, I'm not sure that redefining all your styles like that is the

most
efficient way, though obviously it depends on your workflow...

It may be better to instead set up custom templates for specific

projects.
More info:
http://www.mvps.org/word/FAQs/Custom...platePart1.htm

I'm a tad superstitious here, but for anything worth putting that much
effort into, I just avoid Normal so that I don't have to worry about
unintended cascading effects. For my major project, I used a custom
template, and created a BaseFont style, which I never applied to any

text,
but based all the styles used in the custom template on, so that I

didn't
have to worry about the double-space in my MainText style cascading to

my
BlockQuote style. That worked very well, but I'm not sure you'd want to

do
it with Normal style.

DM



On 12/2/04 8:49 AM, "F A L" wrote:

I am tryging to define my styles so to make them easy to modify. In
particular, I would like to remove all font type definitions from all

styles
but for the normal style (for paragraphs styles) and the default

paragraph
font for character styles (I am using a Spanish version of word so I

don't
have the English name of this style). Then I can define all other

styles as
deviations of these tweo styles and that would make it easier for me

to
change the font of all styles. THe problem is that before realising

that this
was a sensible thing to do I selected specific font for other styles,

such as
Heading 1 and Body tex etc, and I haven't figured out a way to remove

such
definitions for these styles. If i go to the "modifyt style" tab and

clik on
"font" and simply delete the name of the font (e.g. Adobe Garamond

Pro) and
then click OK, the style remains unmodified. It seems that I can only

change
the font by selecting other font. Is there any way to make a style
font-neutral? (apart, of course, of deleting the style and creating it

anew,
which apparently cannot be done with in-built styles anyway).


--
Daiya Mitchell, MVP Mac/Word
Word FAQ: http://www.word.mvps.org/
MacWord Tips: http://www.word.mvps.org/MacWordNew/
What's an MVP? A volunteer! Read the FAQ:

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