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Khoshravan Khoshravan is offline
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Default keep figures and captions together

How can I keep figure or charts with their captions together?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan
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Stefan Blom Stefan Blom is offline
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Default keep figures and captions together

Place the object (figure, chart, etc.) "In line with text" (Format |
Object, Layout tab) and press Enter (so that the object is the only
item in a paragraph). Insert the caption in the paragraph below the
object. Select the two paragraphs and then, on the Forms toolbar,
click the Insert Frame button. Word adds a frame around the items,
which will keep them together. Use Format | Frame to set placement
options for the frame, if necessary.

--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP


"Khoshravan" wrote in message
...
How can I keep figure or charts with their captions together?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan







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Idaho Word Man Idaho Word Man is offline
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Default keep figures and captions together

If you don't want a frame around the figure and caption, a simpler way to
keep them together is to do everything Stefan said except for inserting a
frame from the Forms toolbar. Instead, format the first paragraph (whether
it is the figure or the caption) as Keep With Next ¶ (Format | Paragraph |
Page and Line Breaks).

Fred

"Khoshravan" wrote:

How can I keep figure or charts with their captions together?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan

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Khoshravan Khoshravan is offline
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Default keep figures and captions together

Thanks Stefan. It wokred and helped a lot. Just one more question about
moving the frame.
When I move the frame to top of the page, it eneters the heading area and I
loose control of precisely adujsting its position. I think it has something
to do with anchoring icon which appears in left margin of the page (frame was
in left side, first I moved it to right side of page. Anchor didn't come.
Second when I moved frame up, it went wrong)
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan


"Stefan Blom" wrote:

Place the object (figure, chart, etc.) "In line with text" (Format |
Object, Layout tab) and press Enter (so that the object is the only
item in a paragraph). Insert the caption in the paragraph below the
object. Select the two paragraphs and then, on the Forms toolbar,
click the Insert Frame button. Word adds a frame around the items,
which will keep them together. Use Format | Frame to set placement
options for the frame, if necessary.

--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP


"Khoshravan" wrote in message
...
How can I keep figure or charts with their captions together?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan








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Khoshravan Khoshravan is offline
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Default keep figures and captions together

What is the advantage your method (Not puting a frame)?
Does it solve the moving issue as I mentioned in my previous post?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan


"Idaho Word Man" wrote:

If you don't want a frame around the figure and caption, a simpler way to
keep them together is to do everything Stefan said except for inserting a
frame from the Forms toolbar. Instead, format the first paragraph (whether
it is the figure or the caption) as Keep With Next ¶ (Format | Paragraph |
Page and Line Breaks).

Fred

"Khoshravan" wrote:

How can I keep figure or charts with their captions together?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan



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Suzanne S. Barnhill Suzanne S. Barnhill is offline
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Default keep figures and captions together

You can use Format Frame to define its position precisely, relative to the
page, the margins, or the paragraph it's anchored to.

--
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.

"Khoshravan" wrote in message
...
Thanks Stefan. It wokred and helped a lot. Just one more question about
moving the frame.
When I move the frame to top of the page, it eneters the heading area and

I
loose control of precisely adujsting its position. I think it has

something
to do with anchoring icon which appears in left margin of the page (frame

was
in left side, first I moved it to right side of page. Anchor didn't come.
Second when I moved frame up, it went wrong)
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan


"Stefan Blom" wrote:

Place the object (figure, chart, etc.) "In line with text" (Format |
Object, Layout tab) and press Enter (so that the object is the only
item in a paragraph). Insert the caption in the paragraph below the
object. Select the two paragraphs and then, on the Forms toolbar,
click the Insert Frame button. Word adds a frame around the items,
which will keep them together. Use Format | Frame to set placement
options for the frame, if necessary.

--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP


"Khoshravan" wrote in message
...
How can I keep figure or charts with their captions together?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan









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Cindy M -WordMVP- Cindy M  -WordMVP- is offline
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Posts: 370
Default keep figures and captions together

Hi ?B?S2hvc2hyYXZhbg==?=,

When I move the frame to top of the page, it eneters the heading area and I
loose control of precisely adujsting its position. I think it has something
to do with anchoring icon which appears in left margin of the page (frame was
in left side, first I moved it to right side of page. Anchor didn't come.
Second when I moved frame up, it went wrong)

Once you've created the frame, click on its edge and "wiggle it" a bit until you
see that anchor. Make sure it's next to a paragraph that's going to stay on the
page, or one with which the picture should be linked (if it moves to another
page, the frame will go, as well).

Now right-click the frame and choose "Format Frame". You'll find a checkbox in
there to LOCK the anchor. This means that the anchor will stay with this
paragraph, no matter where you drag the frame. That may help :-)

Cindy Meister
INTER-Solutions, Switzerland
http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindymeister (last update Jun 17 2005)
http://www.word.mvps.org

This reply is posted in the Newsgroup; please post any follow question or reply
in the newsgroup and not by e-mail :-)

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Stefan Blom Stefan Blom is offline
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Default keep figures and captions together

If you don't need to position the caption and the figure relative to
the page (or wrap text around them), you don't need the frame.
Instead, as Fred suggested, you could just let them be part of the
ordinary text flow. In such a case, "Keep with next" makes sure that
Word does not break the page between the figure and its caption.

--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP


"Khoshravan" wrote in message
...
What is the advantage your method (Not puting a frame)?
Does it solve the moving issue as I mentioned in my previous post?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan


"Idaho Word Man" wrote:

If you don't want a frame around the figure and caption, a simpler

way to
keep them together is to do everything Stefan said except for

inserting a
frame from the Forms toolbar. Instead, format the first paragraph

(whether
it is the figure or the caption) as Keep With Next ¶ (Format |

Paragraph |
Page and Line Breaks).

Fred

"Khoshravan" wrote:

How can I keep figure or charts with their captions together?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan





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Pghmax Pghmax is offline
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Posts: 1
Default keep figures and captions together

I appreciate the good thoughts but it's not working for me.

I am using Word 2007 on XP.

I simply want to keep captions with tables and figures and let them flow
wherever in the document - hate to have a tiny graphic taking up an entire
line.

But I can't figure out how to "insert a frame" - as has been suggested
elsewhere. Is that no longer there in 2007?

And i also tried to just check "keep with next" on the paragraph containing
the caption. But when i do that and then go back and select the graphic and
choose "with text wrapping", the graphic moves to the intended location, but
the caption sits stubbornly where it was, except now there is an anchor
nearby. Hmmm?

"Stefan Blom" wrote:

If you don't need to position the caption and the figure relative to
the page (or wrap text around them), you don't need the frame.
Instead, as Fred suggested, you could just let them be part of the
ordinary text flow. In such a case, "Keep with next" makes sure that
Word does not break the page between the figure and its caption.

--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP


"Khoshravan" wrote in message
...
What is the advantage your method (Not puting a frame)?
Does it solve the moving issue as I mentioned in my previous post?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan


"Idaho Word Man" wrote:

If you don't want a frame around the figure and caption, a simpler

way to
keep them together is to do everything Stefan said except for

inserting a
frame from the Forms toolbar. Instead, format the first paragraph

(whether
it is the figure or the caption) as Keep With Next ¶ (Format |

Paragraph |
Page and Line Breaks).

Fred

"Khoshravan" wrote:

How can I keep figure or charts with their captions together?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan






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Stefan Blom Stefan Blom is offline
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Posts: 8,428
Default keep figures and captions together

"Pghmax" wrote in message
...
I appreciate the good thoughts but it's not working for me.

I am using Word 2007 on XP.

I simply want to keep captions with tables and figures and let them flow
wherever in the document - hate to have a tiny graphic taking up an entire
line.

But I can't figure out how to "insert a frame" - as has been suggested
elsewhere. Is that no longer there in 2007?


The Insert Frame command is found he On the Developer ribbon tab, click
Legacy Tools (in the Control group); you'll find it under "Legacy Forms."

Note: If you cannot see the Developer tab, turn it on via Office button |
Word Options, Popular category. Enable the "Show Developer tab in the
Ribbon" option and click OK.

And i also tried to just check "keep with next" on the paragraph
containing
the caption. But when i do that and then go back and select the graphic
and
choose "with text wrapping", the graphic moves to the intended location,
but
the caption sits stubbornly where it was, except now there is an anchor
nearby. Hmmm?


"Keep with next" assumes that the graphic is "In line with text" and thus
treated as (part of) an ordinary text paragraph.

--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP





"Stefan Blom" wrote:

If you don't need to position the caption and the figure relative to
the page (or wrap text around them), you don't need the frame.
Instead, as Fred suggested, you could just let them be part of the
ordinary text flow. In such a case, "Keep with next" makes sure that
Word does not break the page between the figure and its caption.

--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP


"Khoshravan" wrote in message
...
What is the advantage your method (Not puting a frame)?
Does it solve the moving issue as I mentioned in my previous post?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan


"Idaho Word Man" wrote:

If you don't want a frame around the figure and caption, a simpler

way to
keep them together is to do everything Stefan said except for

inserting a
frame from the Forms toolbar. Instead, format the first paragraph

(whether
it is the figure or the caption) as Keep With Next ¶ (Format |

Paragraph |
Page and Line Breaks).

Fred

"Khoshravan" wrote:

How can I keep figure or charts with their captions together?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan













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Yves Boisvert[_2_] Yves Boisvert[_2_] is offline
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Default keep figures and captions together



"Khoshravan" wrote:

How can I keep figure or charts with their captions together?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan

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Yves Boisvert[_2_] Yves Boisvert[_2_] is offline
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Posts: 5
Default keep figures and captions together

I have used the Frame feature, however we have found that using a single cell
table (or two cells table for side by side) that you have a better control of
the figure and the caption.

The table properties allows for great controls on its position

Yves

"Khoshravan" wrote:

How can I keep figure or charts with their captions together?
--
Rasoul Khoshravan Azar
Civil Engineer, Osaka, Japan

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