On Fri, Sep 12, 2008 at 2:20 AM, Jason Cipriani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I realized I left out something important in my example, I wouldn't > mind being able to have more than one indented paragraph, e.g.:
Here, this is the Adobe Acrobat user's manual: http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/pdfs/acrruserguide.pdf Page 9 is exactly the type of formatting that I am going for. Note the bold lines of text, aligned with the left margin of the page, and the content underneath each of those bold lines that is indented and formatted arbitrarily (e.g. some has bullets, there are paragraphs, images, all sorts of things). My own document is actually a technical manual, and there are many such sections. Jason > > --- example --- > > KEYWORD1 > > This is a paragraph that describes the keyword that > was mentioned above. It spans more than one line. > > Here is another paragraph that's related to that last > one, it also spans more than one line. > > KEYWORD2 > > Here is a paragraph about the second keyword. This > also takes up a few lines. > > --- end example --- > > So more accurately, my document is divided up into sections and each > section "header" appears on a line by itself, followed by one or more > paragraphs that are indented on every line. The main problem is having > to drag the indentation marker in the ruler back and forth for every > section. > > A second solution that I've been trying is using a list with no > bullets and a double line spacing between each list item. Then the > keywords are level 1 list items, and each paragraph is a level 2 list > item. This is rather hard to work with, especially when dealing with > page breaks, extra line breaks, and other headers and things in the > document. It does let me use tab and shift+tab to control the > indentation, though, but... it's a little strange. > > Thanks, > Jason > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
