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TF
 
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Actually, it is now 'Horizontal Frame' in W2003: but it doesn't mean there
is a Vertical Frame!

Terry

"Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message
...
: Aha! I have snared you. A frame is a "classic" Word feature that Microsoft
: began to hide when the text box was introduced. But it turns out that
there
: are many situations where a text box is not suitable, and this is one of
: them because Word can't "see" text in a text box for purposes of TOCs,
: cross-references, etc.
:
: To get started with frames, display the Forms toolbar. Select both your
: graphic and your caption and click on the Insert Frame button. This will
put
: both of them in a frame. The frame will probably have a border, which you
: can remove using the No Border button on the Borders palette (flyout from
: the Formatting or Tables and Borders toolbar) or by selecting None in
Format
: | Borders and Shading.
:
: Frame positioning is limited compared to text box layout but perfectly
: adequate for most purposes. You can choose to have it wrapped or not, and
: you can position it relative to the text to which it is anchored or to the
: page, margin, or column. (You can't format it as Behind Text or In Front
of
: Text, but you would rarely want to do that for a graphic and caption,
: anyway.) You can drag it with the mouse for rough positioning and then use
: Format Frame to fine-tune the position, experimenting to see the results
of
: the various settings. Note that you can also allow the size of the frame
to
: adjust automatically to its contents or be fixed at a certain dimension
: horizontally or vertically.
:
: If you decide you will use frames often, use Tools | Customize to put
Frame
: back on the Insert menu where it belongs. It was removed in Word 97 and in
: that version actually hidden in the Customize dialog under the pseudonym
: "Horizontal," but in later versions it appears in the Insert category as
: "Frame."
:
: --
: 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.
:
: "Jeff" wrote in message
: o.verio.net...
: Aha! Eminently logical. I'll try it.
:
: How do you create a frame? By frame, do you mean a text box? This is not
a
: web document.
:
: --
:
: Jeff Stevens
: Email address deliberately false to avoid spam
:
:
:
:
: Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote:
: Try putting both image and caption (both inline) together in a frame
: sized to the width of the image. Then format the frame to be at the
: right margin.
:
:
: "Jeff" wrote in message
: ...
: If an image is aligned to the right of a page (Word 2002), is there
: a way to center a caption under it (relative to the image)? The
: automatic caption created by Word for the right aligned image is by
: default aligned right which looks particularly bad if the caption
: consists of 2 lines of text.
:
: Formatting it to "center" align is no good because the center
: alignment is relative to the page, not the image.
:
: Is there a way to achieve this?
:
: Thanks.
:
: --
:
: Jeff Stevens
: Email address deliberately false to avoid spam
:

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