Adobe InDesign CS2 How-Tos: 100 Essential Techniques

#23. Applying Character and Paragraph Formats

Here's where the fun startsyou get to start picking fonts, sizes, styles, and alignment to jazz up your text. InDesign's text formatting comes in two distinct flavorscharacter formats and paragraph formats. Character formats are attributes such as font and size that you can apply to individual characters. In fact, each character in a document can have its own unique formatting, although this sort of ransom-note style is not generally what graphic designers are aiming for. Paragraph formats are attributes such as indents and tabs that apply to entire paragraphs as opposed to individual characters. (If you can't tell where paragraphs begin and end, choose Type > Show Hidden Characters and look for the paragraph symbol ¶).

Tearing Off the Character Palette

Having all the character formats in the Control palette may make the Character palette seem redundant. But if you find yourself switching back and forth between the Control palette's Character panel and Paragraph panel, you'll appreciate the availability of the Character palette. Simply drag its tab out of its palette to create an individual palette for it. You can then access both Paragraph and Character attributes at the same time. (You can also tear off the Paragraph palette and use the character options in the Control palette.)

Character formats and paragraph formats generally work together to complement the actual content. For example, weekly newsmagazines often use serif fonts and justified text to indicate authority, whereas an invitation to a fundraiser might be centered in a script font for an elegant look. While character formats account for the basic look of textsize, a serif or sans serif fontthe formatting you apply to paragraphs largely controls the "color" of the type. This is not literally "color" as in whether it's black or blue, but the overall value of the type when you glance at a document or even look at it upside down. Are the blocks of text light and airy or dark and dense? Paragraph formats do this by controlling alignment, indents, space between paragraphs, hyphenation and justification, and more.

Applying Character Formats

To apply character formats, highlight the text using the Type tool. Or, you can simply click in a text frame or on a type path and set character formats. The attributes will be applied when you start typing. All the character formats are available in the Character panel in the Control palette (Figure 23a). If you're not sure what an option does, point at it with the mouse to display its Tool Tip. Additional character formatting options are available in the palette menu.

Figure 23a. The Character pane in the Control palette provides quick access to all the character formatting controls available in InDesign.

If you prefer to work with the Character palette (Type menu), it offers a convenient place to specify basics: Font, Size, Leading, Kerning, and Tracking. Choose Show Options from the palette menu to expand the palette with more advanced options such as horizontal or vertical scaling and skewing (Figure 23b). The remaining character formatting options are available in the palette menu as well.

Figure 23b. The Character palette also provides comprehensive character formats.

What Is Leading?

The space between lines in a paragraphaka, leadingis usually a paragraph format. In InDesign, however, it's a character format. On the one hand, this is nice because most of the time you will modify size and leading in relation to each other. As a character format, the Font Size and Leading fields are right by each other. On the other hand, the reason leading is usually a paragraph format is that most of the time you want a consistent amount of space between lines in a paragraph. You don't want it to vary based on individual characters. InDesign offers the best of both worlds. While you always set leading as a character format, you can make it a paragraph format by checking Apply Leading to Entire Paragraphs in the Type panel in the Preferences dialog box.

The only character formats you won't find here are color and stroke (see#34 for more information).

Applying Paragraph Formats

To apply paragraph formats, use the Type tool and click in a paragraph to select it or highlight multiple paragraphs. All the paragraph formats are available in the Paragraph panel in the Control palette (Figure 23c). If you're not sure what an option does, point at it with the mouse to display its Tool Tip. Additional paragraph formatting options are available in the palette menu. Most of the paragraph formats are similar to those available in a word processor. InDesign, however, has a superior method of composing type, which is explained in#24.

Figure 23c. The Paragraph pane in the Control palette provides quick access to all the paragraph formats available in InDesign.

In addition to using the Paragraph panel, you can use the Paragraph palette (Type menu). At its default size, it offers only alignment and indent controls, but you can choose Show Options from the palette menu to add more comprehensive paragraph formats.

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