On 6 Nov 2011 at 17:01, Murray Strome wrote:

> I have created a paragraph style that has the paragraph set to fully
> justify. It does something like this (I hope the E-Mail preserves
> the format):
> 
> Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit.? Nam
> auctor felis neque. Praesent? pulvinar? pulvinar? condimentum. 
> Mauris? elit? massa,? venenatis? et ? tincidunt? in,?? hendrerit?
> a
> lacus. ? Mauris? congue?? posuere? risus?? nec? sodales. ?? Sed
> lobortis congue consequat. Cras pretium dui quis dolor ultrices
> ultrices.?? Pellentesque? habitant? morbi? tristique? senectus? et
> netus ? ? ?????????????? et????????????? ? ? malesuada ? ? ? ? ? ?
> ?? fames.
> 
> whereas I think it should be more like this:
> 
> Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit.? Nam
> 
> auctor felis neque. Praesent? pulvinar? pulvinar? condimentum. 
> 
> Mauris? elit? massa,? venenatis? et ? tincidunt? in,?? hendrerit?
> a
> 
> lacus. ? Mauris? congue?? posuere? risus?? nec? sodales. ?? Sed
> 
> lobortis congue consequat. Cras pretium dui quis dolor ultrices
> 
> ultrices.?? Pellentesque? habitant? morbi? tristique? senectus? et
> 
> netus et malesuada fames.
> 
> If there is only one short word on the last line, it will do it
> correctly (at least what I think is correct). However, with two or
> more words on the last line, it spaces it out.
> 
> I should probably be spending more time searching for the answer on
> line or in my book, but after spending some time at it, I thought
> that it might be more efficient to ask the advice of people with
> more expertise than I.
> 
> I do have a clumsy work-around. I format the whole text frame with
> full justification. Then for those last lines that are two spread
> out, I make each a new paragraph that is just left justified. This
> seems like a lot of work, but it does do the job.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Murray

You want to use Justify, not Forced Justify. It is the fourth icon in the 
series, Forced 
Justify is the fifth.

George

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