At 20:16 01/03/2009 -0800, John Jason Jordan wrote:
On Sun, 01 Mar 2009 19:32:58 -0800 Gary Noop dijo:
On 03/01/2009 12:09 PM, John Jason Jordan wrote:
I can't believe I don't know how to do this, as many years as I have been using Writer. Suppose I have a line of text that ends with a scientific notation like "[-sonorant]." Because of the length of the line Writer breaks it between the "[-" and the "sonorant].

Select [-sonarant] and then Insert|Object|Formula. This will insert it as a formula object and thereafter it won't get hyphenated.

Good suggestion. It worked, but it messes up line spacing. :(

You can sort that. Go to Format | Frame... | Wrap | Spacing (or right-click | Object... | Wrap | Spacing) and adjust (reduce?) the values for Left and Right. Oh, and you may need to insert "nitalic" in front of the text in the Math formula. But you knew that ...

I trust this helps.

Brian Barker


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