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Word - at least through 2003 - has no such provision (don't know about
2007). FWIW, that underline styling in Excel is purely intended to be used with numbers - such as the last cell in a column of figures with a total in the cell below. Although I agree that some degree of adjustment would be desirable, underlining dropped below descenders in a text document is not generally employed. It is difficult to read because it melds the descenders of the upper line with the ascenders of the line below unless you further make appropriate adjustment to the leading (line spacing). That rapidly becomes a nightma-) You'd need a good DTP program that provides that kind of typesetting control. HTH |:) Bob Jones [MVP] Office:Mac On 8/29/07 6:02 AM, in article , "Cas" wrote: My underling in Word cuts off the tails of g's p's etc. To get a professional look, I want the underlining to be low enough to be just clear of the text. In Excel's font formatting tool there is a 'single accounting' underlining tool that has this effect, but I can't see anything similar for Word. |
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