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Doug Robbins - Word MVP Doug Robbins - Word MVP is offline
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Default line & paragraph spacing in Word

The values are additive.

--
Hope this helps.

Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my
services on a paid consulting basis.

Doug Robbins - Word MVP

"LAC" wrote in message
...
Susan,

Can you clarify something for me? When using Space before and Space
after,
if you have a paragraph style that has 6 after, and a heading with 6
before,
with the spacing between the paragraph and the header be 6 pt or does it
add
the "before" and "after" together to give a total space of 12? I'm trying
to
set up a style sheet for some standard documents and Word seems
inconsistent
in how it handles the space before and after.
--
LAC


"Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote:

I'll agree with most of that. The most important point (often disregarded
in
legal documents and similar dogs' breakfasts) is that a heading *must*
have
more Space Before than Space After. Even if you add 3 pts Space After (as
Word's heading styles do by default), you need to have 12, 18, 24 pts
Space
Before (the more leading you have in the body copy, the more space you
need
before the headings).

I tend to type two very different types of copy (aside from letters,
flyers,
and other odds and ends). One type of document I produce is a consulting
report (such as an appraisal or appraisal review), which is printed on
Letter-size paper. This usually uses a Body Text style that is close to
the
Word default: 12 pt TNR with default (Single) line spacing, justified, no
first-line indent, and 6 pts Space After. The other type of document is a
printed book, usually a trade paperback at 6" x 9". For these I usually
use
smaller type, first-line indent, and no space between paragraphs, but
often
the leading is increased to make the book more readable (or more
apparently
substantial).

--
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.

"leftnotracks" wrote in message
...
I'm a professional typographer (which means I hardly ever use Word). So

I'll
offer my $.02. If I contradict Mr. McGhie, then to heck with it.

Body copy should be at least 10 pt. type, and no larger than 12 pt,
unless
set for people with particularly poor eyesight.

Leading (AKA linespacing) should be at least 20% above type size, and
probably a bit more. So 11 pt. body copy should be set on 13.5 or 14 pt
leading.

If you are using paragraph indents, then you should have no extra space
between paragraphs. If you prefer to have space between paragraphs,
then

do
not use paragraph indents.

Space between paragraphs should be in 1/2 line increments. Our 11/14
body
copy would have paragraph spacing of 7 or 14 pt. I prefer to use the
Space
After rather than Space Before for this. Why will be clear later.

Paragraph indents should be in type size increments. Our 11 pt. body
copy
should have indents of 22, 33, or 44 pts. Use larger indents for wider
columns.

Subheads should have significant contract from body copy. If using a
serif
font (Garamond, Times, Georgia) for body copy, use a bold sans-serif
font

for
subheads (Franklin Gothic, Trebuchet, Gill Sans). Set the subhead no
more
than 1 point larger than body copy. Give the subhead extra space above
and

no
space below. This will keep the subhead tight to the copy it follows
and
create a double space above it, cueing the reader to a change in
subject.

You may want several levels of subhead., The one I just stated would be

the
lowest. Higher levels require more formatting, such as slight increases
in
point size, restoring space below and adding more space above, using
paragraph rules (better than underlining, which should be avoided), or
any

or
all or the above.

"Jackie D" wrote:

Really? What's your take on line spacing? I'm always looking for the

best
practice (to use that horrible corporate word!)
--


Many thanks
JD


"Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote:

See
http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Customizat...platePart2.htm.

FWIW,
I don't agree with everything John writes there.

--
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.

"Anne Troy" wrote in message
...
Hi, Jackie. This refers to space below the paragraph. Space
between

the
lines is line spacing (in the Format Paragraph dialog).
I'm not familiar with John's book. Yes, it sounds like he's

contradicting
himself.
In Word, line height is also the line spacing, or...yes...the
font

size,
basically. I believe he's trying to say if you have double line

spacing,
then that would mean a 12pt font would be 24 points spacing, and

that you
should use 8 pts space before in that case. Does this make sense?
*******************
~Anne Troy

www.OfficeArticles.com


"Jackie D" wrote in message
...
Hi

My query might seem basic to you Word experts but I am new to

Formatting
Styles, so please bear with me!

I've been reading 'Word Templates: A Guide to their Creation'
by

John
McGhie, which I have found incredibly useful. But I'm a bit

confused
about
his suggestions for spacing text under Format

StylesModifyParagraph.

I have no trouble understanding spacing above and below
headings

but I
have
come unstuck with the spacing suggestions when it applies to
body

text.

John suggests putting no space above and 9 pts below for Book

Antiqua
12pt
body text. Does this mean the space below a block of text (i.e.
a
paragraph)
or is it referring to the space between the lines?

John also suggests setting "the space above each body text para
to

three
quarters of its line height" for a modern looking document. I'm
a

bit
confused by this also. Is he contradicting the idea of no space

above?
Or
is
he making a new suggestion entirely? I can't tell. And, sorry
if

I'm
being
dumb, but how do I know what the line height is? Is it equal to

the
point
size of the text?

I'd really appreciate it if John McGhie could post a reply!
--


Many thanks
Jackie D