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My last post is about this setting but I realize that in Word 2000 this don
t work. I hightlighted all paragragh including a initial and final paragraph mark as is recommended. After Set Keep Lines Together I found last lines pass to next page on clicking Enter. These lines can be separated too clicking enter between them. Is this behaviour expected ? Thanks. Alejandro Fernandez |
#2
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Note that in Word, you create a new paragraph each time you press
Enter. And the "Keep lines together" setting is in effect for a paragraph; it doesn't work across paragraphs. So I'd say you have to check the "Keep with next" option, too, for the relevant paragraphs. (The option is on the Line and Page Breaks tab of FormatParagraph.) Note, however, that if a page has so much text that it won't fit, you can't force it to stay on that page; Word has to insert a page break somewhere. If this happens, you may have to change the line spacing and text size to get the desired result. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "homeologica" wrote in message ... My last post is about this setting but I realize that in Word 2000 this don t work. I hightlighted all paragragh including a initial and final paragraph mark as is recommended. After Set Keep Lines Together I found last lines pass to next page on clicking Enter. These lines can be separated too clicking enter between them. Is this behaviour expected ? Thanks. Alejandro Fernandez |
#3
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"keep lines together" refers to keeping a single paragraph on a single
page. Hitting Enter tells Word that you now have two paragraphs --- there is no relationship between paragraphs when using "keep lines together." It also can't change the margins of the page to fit everything on one page. If you format all the paragraphs as "keep lines together" and there is enough text to go to two pages, Word should start the 2nd page at the beginning of a paragraph; without the formatting, Word would start the second page based only the number of lines that can fit based on the page margins. This sometimes leads to awkward reading. It sounds as though you want something else to happen: a) you want to keep all the text on a single page or b) you want two or more paragraphs to remain on the same page. Look into the Word command "shrink-to-fit" which will change the font size or else look at the paragraph formatting choice "keep with next" I am unsure where you would find this command in Word 2000 (possibly File, Page Preview) Shrink to fit changes the font size and is best done after you are finished editing and are ready to print. If you make changes after using shrink to fit, you must re-do the command -- it does not keep adjusting. Keep with next keeps two or more paragraphs together on one page. If the text can't fit on one page, it will move both paragraphs to the second page. This command does keep adjusting, but it does not keep all the text on a single page. If you format all the paragraphs with this command, Word ignores you as this command must first obey the page margins that are set. |
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