> Every line in your example document is a new paragraph. To see that more > clearly, click open the "View" and choose "Non-printing Characters". New > paragraphs are then marked with a symbol which looks like a backwards "P" > (also spaces show as a dot, and tabs as a right-pointing arrow). > > To start a new line without starting a new paragraph, hold the Shift key > when pressing Enter, instead of just pressing Enter (with Non-printing > Characters shown, you see an arrow pointing down then left as is common on > the Enter key). The options for widow and orphan control or keep paragraphs > together then work. You might then want to change the "Indents and Spacing" > paragraph options to remove the indent. > > You can set different options for different paragraphs, so changing them at > one point in the document won't affect the whole document. To save having to > change every individual paragraph's options (once you've replaced new > paragraph marks with new lines) you can modify the "Text body" style - from > the "Format" menu choose "Styles and Formatting", right-click "Text body" > and select "Modify..." and set whatever text flow, indent and other options > you want for the style. > > Hope that helps. > Mark. >
Thanks, Mark. That text was copied and pasted from a website. Is there a way to convert all the New Paragraph marks to New Line marks? I tried to do the same conversion once and failed to find a way, but maybe it does exist. Thanks. -- Dotan Cohen http://bido.com http://what-is-what.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
