On Fri, 2006-04-07 at 17:38 -0400, G. Roderick Singleton wrote: > On Fri, 2006-04-07 at 16:50 -0400, Eric Beversluis wrote: > > I'm editing a document in "normal" (nonprinting) view. How do I see > > whether there's a hard page break inserted? (Actually, I would guess the > > same question would arise in printing view, unless one could infer from > > spacing seen at the bottom of some page.) I thought selecting > > "Nonprinting Characters" would show it, but it only shows paragraph > > market, not anything for hard return. There isn't anything under Styles > > and Formatting either that I can find that shows the presence of the > > hard page break. > > > > Normal? There are two view choices, Print and Web layout. If you are > referring to Web layout then I do not understand as web pages do _NOT_ > have page breaks. Please explain.
Now I'm confused. I assumed that if "Print Layout" wasn't selected then the document appeared as it does in Word's "normal" layout, the main benefit of which, to me, if smooth scrolling and not showing margins etc. Is "web layout" something different than this? This is why I don't work in page layout--I find the discontinuities as the program jumps from one page to the next to be extremely bothersome. Is "web layout" something different than this? Presumably even in "web layout" the information for the page break is there, since it doesn't get lost if I go back to "print layout." What I need is to know how, when working with this "smooth" presentation mode, to see where the hard page breaks are. One would even need to see them in "print layout," since once can't always tell by the amount of space at the end of the page whether there's a hard page break inserted. PS--I find nothing in "Help" that defines "Web layout view" or explains what it is. Thanks. EB --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
