Yves and Mathieu,
Unfortunately you can only apply color to an entire running header-footer. It
is possible though to create the effect you're after, but you have to sacrifice
using a user-defined variable in the heading. Since you only occasionally need
it, it might be feasible.
I'm sending a
Hi Mathieu
I guess you are using a character format in the middle of your variable
definition, for example FrameMaker?
I have tested this and, indeed, some properties of the character format
(font family, weight, spread, stretch, superscript) are also displayed in
the Running H/F, others are not
Yves and Mathieu,
Unfortunately you can only apply color to an entire running header-footer. It
is possible though to create the effect you're after, but you have to sacrifice
using a user-defined variable in the heading. Since you only occasionally need
it, it might be feasible.
I'm sending
Hi all,
I'm using FM 7.2 on XP.
In my document, running headers call on Heading1. I sometimes add in 1st-level
titles (Heading1) the name of the product, which is a ProductName variable
formatted in a certain way (half of the name blue, the other purple).
When the product name appears in the
Hi Mathieu
I guess you are using a character format in the middle of your variable
definition, for example FrameMaker?
I have tested this and, indeed, some properties of the character format
(font family, weight, spread, stretch, superscript) are also displayed in
the Running H/F, others are not
Hi all,
I'm using FM 7.2 on XP.
In my document, running headers call on Heading1. I sometimes add in 1st-level
titles (Heading1) the name of the product, which is a ProductName variable
formatted in a certain way (half of the name blue, the other purple).
When the product name appears in the