If I am to go:

//*********************************************************************
import ...;

int colorOne = 7;
int ftcfe = 9;

HWPFDocument document = new HWPFDocument();
FontTable fontTable = document.getFontTable();
List fontList = Arrays.asList(fontTable.getFontNames()); //This is how to 
wrap a primitive array.
ListIterator fonts = fontList.iterator();

while(fonts.hasNext())
{
System.out.println(next.toString()); //A
}

Range range = document.getOverallRange();
CharacterRun runOne = range.getCharacterRun(0); //B
Range rageOne = new Range(0,3000,document);
CharacterRun runTwo = runOne.insertAfter("This is some initial Text");
runTwo.setBold(true);
runTwo.setColor(colorOne); //C
runTwo.setFontSize(16);
runTwo.setFtcFE(ftcfe); //D
//Create a paragraph:
Paragraph paragraphOne = new Paragraph(0,200,document.getRange()); //E
...

document.write(new FileOutputStream(new File("WordFile1.doc")));
//*********************************************************************


-A: if done with an initially empty constructor HWPFDocument, will this 
print
all of the TrueType Font names visible through the JVM from the 
particular OS?
Will the index of a particular font be the int value for use in //D ?

-B: Is this how one creates consecutive new CharacterRuns? Can you create 
your own
CharacterRuns within a Range stipulating a start index?
What happens with how CharacterRuns end?

-C: Should be a simple one; where are the names/indicies for color values 
here?

-D: If there are TTF names and indicies at //A, is this the index data 
needed here at //D ? 
-E:  Is this how one creates a paragraph using pure Java inside
      the Java HWPFDocument?

-F:  In Java, the newline character symbol is '\n'.  In Microsoft Word,
      one may type [shift+Enter] for a new line without starting
      a paragraph, and [Enter] to end,start a paragraph.
     How may one do the [shift+Enter} equivalent in an HWPFDocument?
     Do I just insert a '\n' or "\n" where wanted?



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