Hi, When you set manual page breaks via "Special | Page Break", you can decide, whether you want to remove them with a format import. There is a check box "While Updating, Remove Manual Page Breaks".
Best regards Winfried > -----Original Message----- > From: framers-bounces at lists.frameusers.com > [mailto:framers-bounces at lists.frameusers.com] On Behalf Of Fred Ridder > Sent: Monday, January 19, 2009 11:26 PM > To: amakeler at gmail.com; framers at lists.frameusers.com > Subject: RE: How do you create a new paragraph after a table? > > > Avi Makeler wrote: > > > Thanks for the responses. > > > > >> You could choose Special> Page Break. The problem with > that method is > > >> that FrameMaker removes the page break anytime you > remove overrides. > > > > What?! Really?! In Word this is style independent and is a > hard break , as > > real as typing "avi" or any ASCII character(s). > > That's because Word inserts a control character that *is* the > page break. > FrameMaker does not. You force FrameMaker to break the page either by > specifying the start location for the paragraph that follows > the break (to > "top of page" or "top of column"), or by specifying a large > enough "space > below pgf" for the preceding paragraph so that the next > paragraph cannot > possibly occur on the same page. In either case, unless you create a > dedicated style (e.g. H2_newpage or Body_breakafter), the formatting > that forces the break is a format override. And if you follow > the common > beneficial practice of periodically eliminating overrides by > re-importing the > template's formats into your document, you will eliminate those page > breaks when you do the import. > > > No way of making a permanent page break? > > The way of making a persistent (noting is ever truly > permanent...) page > break is to define one or more paragraph formats that are > specifically > defined to produce a page break. But as others have noted, > it's generally > a bad idea to use persistent page breaks because they are > very likely to > become inappropriate as the text expands and contracts due to editing > and revision of the document. The approach that entails the > least work > to maintain is to ignore page breaks until you are preparing for final > publication, and to strip out all the manual breaks as the > first step before > you start making revisions for the next edition of the document. > > > And if I make a Heading style that starts at the start of a > page, I will > > have to make a variant like that for H2, H3, H4 and H5. > > Also note that you'd need to remember to include *both* variants of > each heading in the "include" list when you set up your TOC. > Otherwise, > you'd only get the headings that don't start a new page. > > The other approach is to control the break from the preceding page by > using a non-content paragraph that has its "space below pgf" > formatting > set to the vertical dimension of your main flow text frame. When you > insert that paragraph, it will inevitably force the next paragraph to > the top of a new page. And because it is a single-purpose paragraph > that you never use to hold content, you can globally delete them to > get rid of all your manual page breaks before starting a new > version of > the document. > > -Fred Ridder