avox wrote: > > Alison Saylor wrote: > >> On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 11:48 PM, Pierre Marchand <capparis at free.fr> >> wrote: >> >>> We would like to know for what exactly you want to change. >>> >>> >> by change I mean I've successfully spaced out the text so the lines >> were not so close together and it was centered overall in the text box >> (not all squished up at the top) >> >> > > The easiest way to do this is with the Properties Palette: > > - Select the textframe > - go to Properties Palette -> Text > - set linespacing mode to fixed and linespacing to eg 16pt > - go to Properties Palette -> Shape > - set the margin at top > Just to amplify a bit. There is a trickiness to the relationship between font size and linespacing. See: http://wiki.scribus.net/index.php/Working_with_text_frames#Properties:_Text_Tab
If you click-hold the button to the left of the linespacing spinbox, you will see the choices Fixed Linespacing, and Automatic Linespacing, and Align to Baseline Grid -- I'm only going to talk about the first 2 choices here. In fixed linespacing versus automatic, the main difference is that in fixed you can independently adjust the linespacing, you lose this in automatic. In both choices, when you are in Select Item mode, changing the font size will adjust linespacing automatically according to your settings in File > Preferences > Typography, where, for example, automatic linespacing of 20% means that linespacing will be 120% of font size. When you are in Edit Contents mode, or in Story Editor and have highlighted text, changing font size does _not_ automatically change linespacing when you are in fixed linespacing but it does in automatic (I note there can be some glitches in this behavior). Also note that in Story Editor, you have no linespacing spinbox at all, except if you Edit Styles. One thing to note is that when you have fonts with different sizes and linespacing in a frame, the Text tab information will be misleading or wrong in Select Item mode. Changing text parameters in Select Item mode changes them for the entire frame. Align to Baseline Grid is a different concept, which you can read about on the wiki if you wish. Greg
