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![]() This may be true of Auto spacing which I've never used, but it is also true to some extent of specific spacing. By default, Spacing Before is always suppressed at the top of a page and Spacing After at the bottom of a page. The exception is after a hard page or column break or a section break. It can be suppressed after a hard page or column break (but not a section break) by enabling the appropriate Compatibility option. And Spacing Before and After between paragraphs are combined by default in recent versions; in order to prevent it, you have to enable the Compatibility option "Don't use HTML paragraph auto spacing." Perhaps if you set the spacing to Auto, this would still happen even with the Compatibility option enabled. Auto spacing (as the reference to HTML suggests) is one of the features introduced in Word 2000 to make Word more suitable for creating Web pages, a truly horrible idea. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote in message ... If you use the Auto space before and after a paragraph you only get one or the other of them, and not both, depending upon where the paragraph is and what comes before or after it. If the paragraph is at the top of the page, the autospace before is ignored. If you have a table between two paragraphs that are formatted with autospace before and after, you will get a space before and after the table (which is what you would normally require. I am not sure exactly what it is, but the autospace is slightly more that 12 points. In most cases, setting Autospace before and after seems to work quite well. Unfortunately, the most common setting (and the very worst) seems to be to have no space before or after and use the enter key to insert an empty paragraph to get spacing between paragraphs. Many practitioners of that method seem to be also unaware of the purpose of the tab key, or for that matter any of the capabilities of the most basic word processor and the documents that they prepare might just as well have been created with a typewriter. -- 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, originally posted via msnews.microsoft.com "bubbakittee" wrote in message ... In Word's paragraph spacing dialog, I see that there is an option to make the spacing "automatic"). This is in the "space before" and "space after" fields. What does "automatic" mean ? thanks bk |
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