Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have 2 documents that are supposed to be nearly identical (word 2003). The
first page has a logo at the top. If you click back and forth between the 2 docs, this logo has exactly the same size and position in each one. The text line (same words in each one) immediately under it is Arial 26 Bold on both documents (and same indentation, alignment, spacing, etc in the paragraph settings AND same font settings - character spacing, no kerning, etc.). As far as i can tell there are zero differences between these 2 lines of text. But if you compare them back and forth so that the logo appears not to move (so it's lined up in both doucments in the same position on the monitor), the line of text in one is ever so slightly lower than in the other. An entire page is like this so that each line is just a touch lower than its counterpart and so the bottom line in one document ends up on the next page where in the other doucment it's at the bottom of the page in question. Iv'e been through every settign I can think of in an effort to find a differenct but have not yet found one. Can anyone tell me why this happens. I've seen it before but it wasn't critical. I need these to match up. Hope someone can help. Keith |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Keith: If I could see the documents, I'm sure I could find the difference.
************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com "Keith G Hicks" wrote in message ... I have 2 documents that are supposed to be nearly identical (word 2003). The first page has a logo at the top. If you click back and forth between the 2 docs, this logo has exactly the same size and position in each one. The text line (same words in each one) immediately under it is Arial 26 Bold on both documents (and same indentation, alignment, spacing, etc in the paragraph settings AND same font settings - character spacing, no kerning, etc.). As far as i can tell there are zero differences between these 2 lines of text. But if you compare them back and forth so that the logo appears not to move (so it's lined up in both doucments in the same position on the monitor), the line of text in one is ever so slightly lower than in the other. An entire page is like this so that each line is just a touch lower than its counterpart and so the bottom line in one document ends up on the next page where in the other doucment it's at the bottom of the page in question. Iv'e been through every settign I can think of in an effort to find a differenct but have not yet found one. Can anyone tell me why this happens. I've seen it before but it wasn't critical. I need these to match up. Hope someone can help. Keith |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks. I'd love to do that but they're confidential. I was just looking for
possible suggestions that might not be obvious. "Anne Troy" wrote in message ... Keith: If I could see the documents, I'm sure I could find the difference. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Try comparing Compatibility Options settings, as these can affect line
spacing. -- 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. "Keith G Hicks" wrote in message ... I have 2 documents that are supposed to be nearly identical (word 2003). The first page has a logo at the top. If you click back and forth between the 2 docs, this logo has exactly the same size and position in each one. The text line (same words in each one) immediately under it is Arial 26 Bold on both documents (and same indentation, alignment, spacing, etc in the paragraph settings AND same font settings - character spacing, no kerning, etc.). As far as i can tell there are zero differences between these 2 lines of text. But if you compare them back and forth so that the logo appears not to move (so it's lined up in both doucments in the same position on the monitor), the line of text in one is ever so slightly lower than in the other. An entire page is like this so that each line is just a touch lower than its counterpart and so the bottom line in one document ends up on the next page where in the other doucment it's at the bottom of the page in question. Iv'e been through every settign I can think of in an effort to find a differenct but have not yet found one. Can anyone tell me why this happens. I've seen it before but it wasn't critical. I need these to match up. Hope someone can help. Keith |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
If you print the two first pages on the same printer, are they the
same or different? It is possible that you are seeing something that only matters on the screen. Remember that when Windows puts font letters on the screen, it will move them slightly so that they line up with the screen pixel grid. Something else you could try is selecting the line of text and entering the following in the VBA immediate window: ? Selection.Information (wdVerticalPositionRelativeToPage) then Enter It should give you a number for vertical position. You could also try it on the logo. There are several related properties, which VBA help will try to avoid telling you about. Bob S On Mon, 26 Sep 2005 23:58:07 -0400, Keith G Hicks wrote: I have 2 documents that are supposed to be nearly identical (word 2003). The first page has a logo at the top. If you click back and forth between the 2 docs, this logo has exactly the same size and position in each one. The text line (same words in each one) immediately under it is Arial 26 Bold on both documents (and same indentation, alignment, spacing, etc in the paragraph settings AND same font settings - character spacing, no kerning, etc.). As far as i can tell there are zero differences between these 2 lines of text. But if you compare them back and forth so that the logo appears not to move (so it's lined up in both doucments in the same position on the monitor), the line of text in one is ever so slightly lower than in the other. An entire page is like this so that each line is just a touch lower than its counterpart and so the bottom line in one document ends up on the next page where in the other doucment it's at the bottom of the page in question. Iv'e been through every settign I can think of in an effort to find a differenct but have not yet found one. Can anyone tell me why this happens. I've seen it before but it wasn't critical. I need these to match up. Hope someone can help. Keith |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
double window envelope | Page Layout | |||
Bullets/numbers will not indent after first line | Microsoft Word Help | |||
Can line height be defined independent of the font in use? | Microsoft Word Help | |||
Vertical line--leaving line and losing the box | New Users | |||
Line Height Adjustments | Formatting Long Documents |