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Graham Mayor Graham Mayor is offline
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Default "leading" between lines---what is it? how to measure it?; additio

Leading is an old typesetters term and refers to refers to the amount of
added vertical spacing between lines of type. When type was set by hand in
printing presses, strips of lead of appropriate thicknesses were inserted
between lines of type to add vertical space, to fill available space on the
page. A 12 point typeface with 2 points of leading will produce a 14 point
line space. Off the top of my head, I think the single line space setting is
1.2 * the point size of the font - but I would like to see the court
official who can spot the difference between 1.75 and 2 points in a
document, without measuring it.

Century Schoolbook was provided with Access 97 SR2, Creative Writer 2,
Office 2000 Premium, Office 4.3 Professional, Office 97 Small Business
Edition SR2, Office 97 SR1a, Office Professional Edition 2003, PhotoDraw
2000, Picture It! 98, Publisher 2000, Publisher 97, Publisher 98, TrueType
Font Pack and can be installed from the installation discs of any of those
products you may have around.

--

Graham Mayor - Word MVP

My web site www.gmayor.com
Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org




Word Guy 11 wrote:
1. I must prepare a document (for court), in 12 pt. font that has
"at least 2-point leading between the lines." What does this mean?
When I go to
A. Word: home: para.: line spacing options: indents and spacing:
line spacing: single, there is the 'normal' space between lines of
single-spaced print.
I also note, however, that I can go to
B. Word: home: para.: line spacing options: indents and spacing:
line spacing: exactly: at 12 pt.---and the lines appear closer
together; changing it to 14 pt. seems to make the lines about the
same as A. above. I wonder if the . . . exactly: 14 pt., when
using 12 pt. font, means
that there is a 2 pt. "leading" (the difference between 12 pt. font
and 14 pt. 'exact' line spacing. Is that so?
Since the normal single spacing seems to have about the same
spacing between lines, I wonder what the actual "points" (if that is
the right term) is between lines of 12 pt. font---is it 2 (or, for
example, 1.85 or 2.2 or some such?)
2. The document also must be in one of three fonts only: Century
Expanded, Century Schoolbook, or New Century Schoolbook. My MS Word
2007 has a "Century" font but none of the other three are shown. I
see that the local Kinko's, which also has MS Office 2007, has all
three of the required fonts. Can I get one or all of these three
required fonts from Microsoft? Thank you.