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The following information is reprinted with permission, Ultimate
Power Tips 1.0A (c) 1992, 1993 Paul Scanlon, Scanlon Enterprises
----------------------------------------------------------------
POWER TIPS FOR WORDPROCESSING
AND DESK TOP PUBLISHING
----------------------------------------------------------------
Creating High-Impact Documents and Presentations
These days, virtually everyone has access to thousands of
typefaces. Low cost font generators, like Fontware, scalable
font cartridges and cheap PostScript printers make it easier
than ever to add attention grabbing typefaces to your
newsletters, presentations and brochures. Using flashy fonts in
a business report or training manual, is like wearing a plaid
suit to a board meeting. Such documents, demand a conservative,
businesslike image. Fortunately, that doesn't mean you're stuck
with your laser printers' boring Times Roman (Dutch) or overused
Helvetica (Swiss) fonts. The key to elegant looking business
documents, is in using the right typeface family, which includes
all styles (such as bold or italic), widths (condensed or
expanded) and weights (light or heavy) of a particular typeface.
Finding the right Type: Since you'll be using a single typeface
family, for both headlines and body text, look for one that
offers strong contrasts between its styles, widths and weights.
Good picks include ITC Bookman, New Century Schoolbook,
Palatino, Avant Garde, Futura and Univers. Check the samples
printed in the sizes and resolution you plan to use. Some
typefaces printed at 300 dots per inch (DPI) are difficult to
read at sizes of less than 10 points, because the ink toner
fills in the enclosed portions of letters, like "e" and "o". Try
to compare samples of the same typeface from different vendors,
they'll often vary widely in quality and appearance. If you're
printing the finished product at a service bureau, make sure
your fonts can be output at that site. Typefaces from smaller
vendors aren't always supported by professional typesetting
equipment. When in doubt, stick with fonts from major vendors.
Getting Down to Business: Here are some tips for designing a
simple business report :
1) Use bold type for headlines and bold italic for major
subheadings. To lend the page a symmetrical appearance, use
multiples of the body text size to determine the sizes for
headers. For example, with 12 point body style text, use a
subheading that's twice the size (24 points) and a headline
three to four times as large (36 to 48 points).
2) Use 10 to 12 point roman (normal) type for all body text. Use
italic type of the same size to indicate book titles, foreign
words and technical terms.
3) To differentiate minor subheadings from body text, set them
in bold at 12 to 14 points.
4) Condensed (narrow) and lighter weight versions of the main
typeface are useful when you have to fit lots of body text into
a small space. For example, in a table or directory. Use 12 to
14 point type for figures and table headings, and 10 to 12 point
type for the body text of tables.
5) Use expanded (wide) and heavier (extrabold, demi, black)
versions of a font for display text and special elements, like
logos and large capital letters. Heavier faces are especially
handy for long headlines. Their increased weight lets you use a
smaller point size without diminishing the headers importance.
6) For headers and footers (information at the top or bottom of
a page that identifies its contents) and footnotes, use roman
type set slightly smaller than the main. Most importantly, keep
thins simple. Even though some type families offer a wide range
of harmonious variations, less is usually more when it comes to
mixing up different type styles, weights and sizes in a typical
business report.
To aid you in understanding some Desk Tip Publishing terms, here
are some Desk Top Publishing Definitions
MEASUREMENTS
Pica : One pica is equal to 1/16th of an inch. Picas are
commonly used to measure such page dimensions as column width,
margins and spaces for placement of art.
Point : A point is 1/12th of an inch. 12 points equals 1 pica.
You'll often see picas and points used together. Points are also
used to measure the size of a typeface.
Em Dash : An em dash is equal to the width of a font's capital
M. As a form of punctuation, these long dashes are used, instead
of two dashes to show abrupt changes or digressions in a
sentence.
En Dash : An en dash is usually half the width of an em, and can
be the same size or longer than a hyphen, depending upon the
typeface. Use hyphens to separate compound, hyphenated or broken
words that occur at the end of a line. Us em dashes for
inclusive dates and times, such as 1900-2000 and 6am-7pm.
TYPE
Typeface : The style of type referred to by a given name.
Helvetica, Bookman, and Ultra Bodoni are typefaces.
Weight : The thickness of the lines that make up the characters
in a typeface and determine the darkness on the page. Weight may
range from extra light to medium weight to extra bold.
Font : A combination of the typeface, type size and weight.
Helvetica 12-point bold is one font, Helvetica 14-point bold is
yet another.
Serif : Many typefaces have horizontal or vertical "tails", or
"serifs", attached to the edges of letters. Serif faces are
easier to read because the serifs lead the eye from letter to
letter.
Sans Serif : Typefaces without tails or serifs, used primarily
in headlines. Large bodies of text in sans serif are difficult
to read.
X-Height : The height of the lowercase x in a font represents
the height of the main body of the lowercase letters. It is
important in selecting a typeface. A font which has a greater
x-height, appears larger than a font of the same point size with
a smaller x-height.
Cap Height : The height of the capital letters of a font. Cap
height, like x-height, is an important feature of a typeface's
overall design.
SPACING
Leading : A term derived in the early days of hot-metal
typesetting. It refers to the thin strips of hot lead that were
added as a buffer between the bottom of one line of type and the
top of the line below. NOW, the term is used in type
specifications to express the baseline-to-baseline measurement
(in points). Type set at 10/12 refers to 10 point type with 12
point leading, which leaves abut 2 extra points of white space
between lines.
Tracking : The spaces between the letters in a word or line of
text. Tightening or loosening the tracing of a line can improve
overall appearance by squeezing text into tight areas or
inflating it to fill out a larger space. Increasing the space
between letters also improves the legibility of smaller type
sizes.
Proportional Spacing : A system, that improves the look of
documentation by eliminating excessive white space between
letters. While typewriters, which use monospacing, allocate the
same amount of space to each letter, proportional spacing allots
thin letters, like 1 less horizontal space than a letter like M.
Kerning : The adjustment of white space between letter pairs to
accommodate the varying shapes of letters to give a better
typographic fit and appearance.
PAGE LAYOUT
Greeking : The practice of using shaded blocks or lines to show
how copy fits on a page. Because the actual text file isn't
used, greeking increases a computer's redrawing speed when you
make layout and design changes on a full page.
River : A design faux pas in which white spaces between words
line up and run down a column, resembling a river. Rivers can
occur when type is spaced to loosely in justified text.
Tag WordPerfect Files
When you display the contents of a WordPerfect directory, with
the List Files Key (F5), you can individually tag and untag
files (for copying or deletion) by pressing the asterisk key. To
tag or untag all files at once, press {Alt}F5.
Sneaky Deletions in Word
Delete text in Microsoft Word, and the program stores it in
Scrap for later recall. When you want to make a deletion without
disturbing the contents of the Scrap, select the text you want
to delete, and press <Shift>-<Delete>.
Better Printer Control With XyWrite III
When you print a file with XyWrite III or III+, the printer
won't automatically advance to the top of the next blank page.
You can issue a formfeed from XyWrite command line in several
ways; the easiest is to add a formfeed line to the STARTUP.INT
file. Just type "BC" default FF=1 on any line in the file.
Applications Load Files Automatically
Many applications allow you to open a document at the time the
application starts, from the DOS command line. If you want to
load WordPerfect 5.1 and open TEST.DOC from the directory
C:\TEMP, for example, from a DOS prompt, enter, "WP
C:\TEMP\TEST.DOC". The application loads the document, placing
you into EDIT mode automatically. This NOT only gets the you
right to work, but your application and document load much
faster.
Quick Text Moves in WordPerfect
Instead of using WordPerfects Block functions or Move keys, try
this quick and dirty way to move text with the <F1> cancel key.
Delete any amount of text with the delete keys or a block of
text with block delete, move the cursor to the new location, and
press <F1> and then "1" to restore the deletion. Avoid deleting
unwanted characters so you don't have to edit the insert.
Repeat Macros in WordPerfect
To execute a WordPerfect macro more that once, just position the
cursor at the starting point, press <ESC>, enter the number of
times you want the macro to repeat, and start the macro.
Correct Your WordStar Dictionary
Oops! You just saved a misspelled word to your WordStar 4.0+
personal dictionary. The documentation neglects to mention that
WordStar creates Personal dictionary files in ASCII. You can
correct the errant entry by simply editing the contents of the
file. Start WordStar, press "N" to open a nondocument file,
enter "PERSONAL.DCT" and press <ENTER>. Next press <Ctrl>-OF to
search for the misspelling or scroll through the dictionary list
to find the misspelled word. Make the correction and press
<Ctrl> KD to save the change.
Speedy Text Moves Between WordStar Windows
WordStar 5.0's built-in command for moving blocks of text
between windows, {Ctrl}KG, is slow because it rewrites the
entire screen. For faster block moves, use the undelete command
{Ctrl}U. Define a block of text, you want moved, from the first
window ({Ctrl}KB & {Ctrl}KK), delete it with the {Ctrl}KY, press
{Ctrl}OK to switch to the second window, then press {Ctrl}U to
unerase the block, in the second window.
WordStar Macros at Your Fingertips
To run a WordStar 5.0+ macro, you usually press <ESC> and an
alpha key. Touch typists, and keyboard jockeys who find it
awkward to lift a hand from the keyboard, should try pressing
<Ctrl>-[ and the appropriate alpha key to start macros.
Substituting two key strokes for one may sound slow, but keeping
your fingers on the keyboard speeds up input.
Draw WordPerfect Lines Last
When you use WordPerfects' Line Draw feature to create a box
around text, the vertical line segments will shift if you
inadvertently enter text with <Insert> on. The solution ? Enter
your text and the horizontal lines first and draw the vertical
lines last.
Handy WordPerfect 5.0 Directory Lists
You can quickly create neatly formatted printouts of WordPerfect
5.0 directories by pressing {F5} to display the directory
contents, then press {Shift}&{F7} . WordPerfect will print a
listing of all files and directory information, even if it
occupies more than 1 screen.
WordPerfect Automatic Footnote Creation
To create a note, position the cursor where you want the notes
reference number, and press <Ctrl><F7>. Press "F" for a footnote
or an "E" for an endnote, and press "C". Type the notes text,
then press <F7>. To delete a note, move the cursor to its
reference number, then press <DELETE>-Y. To edit a note, press
<Ctrl><F7>, press either "F" or "E" (for footnote or endnote),
and then "E" (for edit). Enter the notes reference number and
press <ENTER>. Now, edit the text and press <F7> when done. When
you insert or delete a note, renumbering is automatic, but the
change will not appear on screen until the cursor is moved. By
default, WordPerfect numbers notes continuously. In long
documents, however, you'll probably want the notes in each
section to begin with "1". Place the cursor wherever you want to
begin renumbering, the press <Ctrl><F7> and "F" or "E", then
finally, "N" (for number). Enter "1" as the new start number and
press <ENTER>. WordPerfect normally, prints endnotes, at the END
of a document. To have them printed at the end of a section
(chapter) instead, move to the end of a section, press
<Ctrl><F7) and "P". You can restart endnote numbering here by
pressing "Y". Press "N" to maintain the sequence. Ignore the
comment box warning that appears at the endnote position.
WordPerfects default format, is ideal for most uses, but, can be
changed if needed. Move to the top of the document, press
<Ctrl><F7> and "F" or "E" (footnote or endnote). Press "O" to
view the options menu. These options include : "1) line spacing,
which is default of 1, 2) set minimum footnote (endnote) size
(this is the text that must appear on the same page ast its
reference before the rest is bumped to the next page, usually a
default of ½ inch), 3) & 4) control reference mark appearance,
5) type of character for reference marks (numbers are the
default), 6) restart renumbering on every page option, 7) set
line spacing to separate note from main body, 8) set the note
break continued to "on" or "off", 9) Force footnotes to the
bottom of a partial page.
Custom Footnote and Endnote Text
WordPerfect forces you to format footnote text one footnote at a
time. Create the macros below, to automate this time-consuming
job : Press "<Ctrl><F10>" (start macro recording) then "<Alt>-F"
or "<Alt>-E" for footnote or endnote, then type "Footnote" or
"Endnote", press <ENTER>. Press <Ctrl><F7>-F or <Ctrl><F7>-E
(footnote or endnote), then "C". Now press <Ctrl><F8>, then
close the font style you want as a default, and press
<Ctrl><F10><F7> to end macro recording. Now, to insert a
preformatted note, press <Alt>-F or <Alt>-E and enter your text
and press <F7>.
Print Odd or Even Pages
By default, Word, can't print just odd or even pages. This Word
5.0+ macro, adds that capability, enabling you to print two
sided documents. Simply print the odd pages (or even), flip the
set over (reorder correctly) and print the reverse numbers (odd
or even). Enter the following, on a blank Word screen. Press
<Ctrl>-[ or <Ctrl>-] to create chevrons ("«" or "»").
<key1>+<key2> means press key1 and key2 at the same time. Each
line is a new line (use <ENTER>).
«SET ECHO = "OFF"»
<Ctrl>+<PgDown><Ctrl>+<ESC>JP
«SET LAST = FIELDS»<ESC><Ctrl>+<PgUp>
«ASK EorO = ?ENTER O for Odd or E for Even pages.»
«IF EorO = "O" OR EorO = "o"»«SET START = 1»«ENDIF»
«IF EorO = "E" or EorO = "e"»«SET START = 2»«ENDIF»
«SET PPAGE = START»
«WHILE LAST > PPAGE»
«SET ECHO = "ON"»<ESC>PO<DOWN ARROW 4 TIMES>P<TAB>
«PPAGE»
<ENTER><ENTER>
«SET PPAGE = PPAGE + 2»
«ENDWHILE»
<ESC>PO<DOWN ARROW 4 TIMES>A<ENTER><ESC>
To save the macro, press <Shift>+<F10><ESC>C, enter "OddEvenMac"
and press <ENTER>. To store the macro permanently, press
<ESC>TGS<ENTER>. To use the macro, press <ESC>I, Type
"OddEvenMac" and press <ENTER>. When prompted, enter "E" for
even pages or "O" for odd pages and press <ENTER>.
Finagling Fonts in MicroSoft Word
Need a font set which supports extended characters quickly? The
following macro for Word should do the trick.
«ASK STRING = ?SEARCH FOR ?»
«IF STRING = ""»
«QUIT»
«ENDIF»
«ASK FONT = ?FONT NAME?»
«IF FONT = ""»
«SET FONT = Courier"»
«ENDIF»
«ASK POINT = ?POINT SIZE?»
«IF POINT = ""»
«SET POINT = "12"»
«ENDIF»
<Ctrl><PgUp>
<ESC>S«string»<ENTER>
«WHILE FOUND»
<ESC>FC<Down 3>«FONT»<TAB>
«POINT»<ENTER><Right Arrow>
<ESC>S<ENTER>
«ENDWHILE»
This macro, will search for "string", and each time if finds a
match, will change the font an point size for the desired text.
After starting the macro, your will be prompted for the
character or string to modify. To abort, press <ENTER> now. If
you enter a character or string, you will next be prompted for a
font name, such as Courier or Elite, then point size, such as 12
or 14. If <ENTER> only is detected, the default 12 point Courier
will be set.
Inserting Spaces Using WordPerfect
The following WordPerfect macro, will insert spaces to the right
of the cursor position. To make this macro, we must enter the
macro editor. To enter the macro editor, enter the following key
sequences: <Ctrl><F10> <Alt>I (two keystrokes), then enter
"Insert Blanks" and press <ENTER> . Now press <Ctrl><F10>
<Ctrl><F10> (twice) and finally, <Alt>IE. The command {Display
Off} will be displayed, press <DELETE> to delete it. Now, that
you've get an empty macro, it's time to create our own. Enter
the following : {ASSIGN} typeover {STATE}&256
{IF}{VARIABLE}typeover
{Typeover}
{END IF}
{LEFT}
{IF}{VARIABLE}typeover
{Typeover}
{END IF}
Commands inside "{" can be selected by pressing <Ctrl><PgUp> and
selecting the command from a menu. To enter the expression
{Typeover}, press <Ctrl>V and <INSERT>. Enter ' (LEFT>\)' by
pressing <SPACE>,<Ctrl>V, and <Cursor Left>. Use <TAB> to indent
the command between {IF} and {END IF}. After entering the macro,
press <F7> to exit the macro editor. To use, move cursor to
where you want to insert spaces, and press <Alt>I
Index concordance Macro
This macro streamlines the process of adding text to a
WordPerfect concordance file. You can then generate an index
from the concordance and save the file to index future
documents. To record the macro, start WordPerfect, type a word
or two, then follow these steps.
1) Press <Alt><F4> to block any word on the screen
2) Press <Ctrl><F10> to begin macro recording
3) Press <Alt>I and type "Concordance" and press <ENTER>
4) Press <Ctrl><F4>bc<Shift><F3><ENTER>
5) Press <Home><Home><Cursor Rt><ENTER><Shift><F3>
6) Press <Ctrl><F10> to halt macro recording
To use the macro, in a document, block a keyword, then press
<Alt>I, and repeat as needed. When you've finished adding to the
concordance file, press <Shift><F3>, then <F10> to save the file
with it's own name. To add to the list in a late session, press
<Shift><F3> to switch screens, then load the concordance file
and press <Shift><F3> to switch back to main doc, before running
the macro.
Index and Table of Contents Macro for Word
Word 4.0 and 5.0 comes with macros for marking index and table
of contents entries. To load the macros, press <ESC>TGL, enter
the macro, and press <ENTER>. (Word 4.0 use <ESC>TGM instead).
You may have to include path information for the file, which is
normally in the main Word directory. To mark an entry, highlight
the text, press <Ctrl>IE. To mark a highlight table of contents
entry, press <Ctrl>TE. Another macro lets you create an index
from a concordance's file. To use, press <Ctrl>IW, type the
concordances file name and press <ENTER>. Word will compile the
index, listing all words in the concordance file, plus
previously marked entries.
Inserting Captions in Ventura an PageMaker
It's always a good idea to write caption text using your word
processor, then import it into your document. Here's how to
place caption text inside PageMaker and Ventura documents. After
you've written and spell-checked your captions, import the text
file into the document. In PageMaker, simply place the file on
the pasteboard, cut each caption, and paste it in place.
Ventura's a little trickier. First you must use the Frame menu's
Anchors & Captions option to create an empty caption frame,
which automatically links to the picture frame. Then, replace
the graphic inside the picture frame with the text file (by
clicking on the frame, then on the file name), separate the
desired caption, and insert it in the caption frame. Finally
return the graphic to the picture frame.
Importing 1-2-3 Worksheets in WordStar
If you use WordStar Professional 5.0 and up, it's easy to import
1-2-3 worksheets. With a WordStar document open, press {Ctrl}KR,
and type the path and name of the WK1 file, you wish to view,
edit or print. You can either specify the worksheet range or
press {Enter} to accept the whole worksheet. To print the
worksheet, adjust the margins and print it as you would any
other document.
Case Shifting in WordPerfect
WordPerfect 5.x has a little known command, that switches a
block of text from uppercase to lowercase, or vice versa. First,
mark the text as a block, using <Alt><F4>, then press
<Shift><F3> followed by "U" for uppercase or "L" for lowercase.
When converting to lowercase, WordPerfect capitalizes the first
letter of a sentence, if a period appears before it. The pronoun
"I" also stay capitalized, as do any other single letter
abbreviations followed by a period.
Finding a File Using Word
Word 5.0's Library Document retrieval command will search
through an entire directory of documents for text you specify,
then let you load the document you want. This macro automates
the process. Insert the following text onto a blank Word Screen.
1) Press <Shift><F3> to start macro record
2) Press <ESC>LDQ then <Cursor Down> five times
3) Press <Shift><F3> to end recording
4) Type "FindText.Mac" and press an unused control key
combination. Then press <ENTER>E.
5) Press the <ESC>TGS keys to save the macro
To use the macro, press The control sequence set in step 4, such
as <Ctrl>F. Type the text you want to find and press <ENTER>.
Word will search all documents in the current directory, then
show you a list of files. To load a file, highlight it, then
press "L" and <ENTER>.
More Ways to Delete With WordPerfect
WordPerfect 5.x provides a variety of ways to delete text. Here
are two examples left out of the WordPerfect manual. If the
cursor is on the fist letter of a word, or in the space between
two words, pressing {Home}& {Back space} deletes the preceding
word. If the cursor is on the first letter of a word, pressing
{Home}&{Delete} deletes that word. If the cursor is anywhere
within a word that same key combination, deletes from the cursor
to the end of the word.
Synonym Searches With Word
When you're trying to embellish a humdrum sentence by choosing a
sprightly synonym, it helps to see your new word choice in
context. Here's a simple (and undocumented) way to team Word
5.0's thesaurus with the undo command in test drive that
potentially perfect word. Position the cursor on the appropriate
word, press "<Ctrl><F6>" to open the thesaurus, highlight a
synonym, and press <ENTER> to replace the original word. Now you
can press "<ESC>-U" to flip between the original and the
alternative. If the synonym doesn't add the flair you're looking
for, press "<Ctrl><F6>" to continue the search.
WordPerfect Thesaurus Navigation
WordPerfect's thesaurus may often give you more synonyms than
will fit in the three columns provided. What's more, you can
actively select from only one of those columns, the one with the
boldface letters to the right of the words. To navigate through
the thesaurus listings, use the cursor left and right keys, to
go from column to column. If the contents of a column don't fit
on screen, the page up & down (gray plus & minus), will scroll
the entries.
Flip-Flop WordStar Menus
WordStar 5.x Pulldown menus provide a convenient way to learn
the program, but the classic WordStar menus are faster once you
master them. Although switching from classic to pulldown menus
is an easily remembered 4-key-stroke process (<Ctrl>-JJ4),
switching in the opposite direction is an awkward 6 keystrokes.
Here's a macro that automates the change from pulldown to
classic menus. Press <ESC>-? to display the Shorthand menu.
Assign the macro to the H key by pressing "H", and type a brief
description of the macro at the prompt. Press <ENTER> to begin
recording the macro keystrokes. Press "<Ctrl>-P-<Alt>-O" to pull
down the Other menu. Next, press "<Ctrl>-P-<Ctrl>-X" three times
to move the cursor down to the help level prompt, press "<Ctrl>-
P-<Ctrl>-M" and hit "3". Finally, press <ENTER><Ctrl>-U to exit
the Shorthand menu, and press "Y" to save the macro. Now,
whenever you want to switch from classic to pulldown menus, just
press <ESC>-H.
Repeating Text in WordPerfect 5.0
If you want to repeat a block of text several times throughout a
WordPerfect document, highlight the desired text by using
{Alt}&{F4}; then press {F10} to save the block and press {Enter}
instead of typing a block name. When you want to retrieve the
block, press {Shift}&{F10} (retrieve), then press {Enter}. The
block remains in memory until you exit WordPerfect.
Dating Letters Automatically
You may already have a glossary entry in MicroSoft Word, to put
your return address at the top of a letter. With a small
addition, to that glossary, you can have Word enter the correct
date when you print a letter. On the line after the street and
city lines, in your glossary entry, put the word "date" by
itself, then press <F3>. Whenever you type the letter or the
name of the glossary entry, and press <F3> twice, the return
address will appear in your letter with the current date.
Backtrack Dialog Boxes With Ventura Publisher
A useful Ventura shortcut, uses the <Ctrl>X key combination to
redisplay the most recently used dialog box. This saves time and
eliminates the need to reselect menus and respecify menu options
to repeat the last operation you performed. For example, <Ctrl>X
is especially helpful when you're trying to determine the best
cropping and sizing for an imported graphic.
One Step to PageMaker and File
You can bring up Windows, PageMaker and a PageMaker document in
one step from the DOS prompt. If your WIN.EXE and PM.EXE files
are in directories named in the DOS PATH and your PageMaker
document file is in the current directory then enter "WIN PM
filename", where filename is the document, will start
everything. If the document is NOT in the current directory,
then filename should include the path, to the document.
Printing Overlays With PageMaker
Some overhead transparencies are designed to be overlaid, one on
top of the other, during presentation. For example, the first
overlay might show the bar chart representing last years sales
volume by quarter, and a second overlay would add the bars that
represent target sales volumes for the current quarter or coming
year. Instead of creating two separate images and printing them,
hoping that the elements will coincide, create the composite
image on a single page an use PageMakers color feature to assign
a different color to the elements on each overlay. For example,
make the title, axes, tick marks, axes labels and first set of
bars black, and make the second set of bars and any added labels
another color (say blue). When you print the set on a black and
white printer, with the SPOT COLOR SEPARATION option, the two
images will print as separate sheets. Note that in this example,
the two sets of bars, would have to be drawn as two separate
graphics before importing them into PageMaker. If you create
them as a single graphic, PageMaker can't separate the colors
assigned in other graphics applications. Note also that the
second overlay in this case does not repeat the axes , tick
marks and labels of the first overlay. If you're NOT using a
color printer, add colors with film or gel paint for a striking
effect. You can use this technique to create overlays on a color
printer, provided that each overlay is one color. You can't have
more than one color on each sheet of acetate, if you want to use
PageMakers SPOT COLOR SEPARATION feature, to create the overlays
Menus Without a Mouse in WordPerfect
You don't need a mouse to take advantage of WordPerfect 5.1's
pull down menus, but a few changes in your Setup arrangement
will enhance your use of this new feature. Choose Setup
(<Shift><F1>), 2-Display, 4-Menu Options and then change each of
the following options to "Yes" :
4) Alt Key Selects Pull Down Menu
7) Menu Bar Separator Line
8) Menu Bar Remains Visible
The new main menu will always be visible, but separated from the
text. Tapping the <Alt> key activates the new menu system.
Restoring Normal Font in Word For Windows
When you use any of the <Ctrl> keystroke combinations, in Word
for Windows, to enter boldface, italic, underline and other font
modes, the suggested way to return to normal font is to press
<Ctrl><Space>. Another way, which you may find easier, is to
press the right arrow key at the end of the next you've just
entered, in an enhanced mode. This moves the cursor out of the
area you have defined for special printing and into normal
formatting.
Snappy Quarters and Halves for WordPerfect
If you want to insert ¼ or ½ into your WordPerfect documents,
try using the Compose key. Press <Ctrl>-V followed by either
"/4" or "/2" to produce the "¼" or "½" character respectively.
Shrinking Your PageMaker Files
When PageMaker saves a file, it saves the changes you've made
since the last two saves, enabling you to Revert to previous
versions of the document but also creating a larger file. To
Shrink a PageMaker data file up to 50%, depending on the type of
elements you've changed, save your file with Save as while
keeping the same name. Be warned, that after doing this, you
won't be able to use Revert!
Case of the Disappearing Word 5.0 Headers
Do your running heads disappear from sight after you format them
with Format Running-Head ? If so, use the Options command to set
Show Layout to No. This will bring your header lines back into
view.
The Ventura Dialog Box Two-Step
Tired of the click-click-click of the mouse ? Consider Ventura's
{Ctrl}X shortcut. If you want to cancel and escape a dialog box,
just press {Ctrl}X. If you need to jump back to the last dialog
box used, press {Ctrl}X again.
No-Sweat WordPerfect Line-Height Adjustment
In WordPerfect 5.0+, if line height is set to Auto, you can
advance up or down a quarter or half a line without manually
measuring line height and calculating the fractional amount.
Press "<Shift><F8>oa". Type "u" for up or "d" for down, and
enter ".25u" for a quarter line or ".5u" for half a line.
Regardless of the point size, these unit amounts are converted
automatically to the units of measurement you have selected
under Setup.
Fast WordPerfect Dot Leaders
Want margin-to-margin leaders(.....) to, say , make flush-right
text stand out ? In WordPerfect 5.1, just press {Alt}&{F6}
twice. WordPerfect will move the cursor flush right,
automatically add the dots, and await your text input.
Watch Those WordStar Wild-Card Deletes
WordStar Professional 4.0 and later versions, allow you to make
wild-card deletes in the DELETE dialog box (Y at the Opening
Menu or {Ctrl}&KJ from within a document). But the delete
function uses DOS level commands, and if you enter "*.*", you
will delete every file in the subdirectory, not just the subset
that shows on the WordStar directory screen, by default. If you
have an EXE and other application files in the logged directory,
be careful about your wild-card usage, with DELETE.
DisplayWrite Text Searches With Norton Utilities
DisplayWrite uses the EBCDIC coding scheme for storing data
rather than the ASCII standard used by most DOS applications.
This makes DisplayWrite document files impenetrable to most text
search programs. To search DisplayWrite files for text with
Norton Utilities 4.5+, Text Search program (TS.EXE), use the
"/EBCDIC" extension, as in "TS *.DOC text to search for
/EBCDIC".
Revealing Tab Settings in WordPerfect
If you frequently change tab settings in WordPerfect, you
probably want to be able to see your settings. You can display
tab set indicators in WordPerfect 4.2+, using either Revival
Codes ("<Alt><F3>") or Window ("<Ctrl><F3> 1#", where "#" is the
number of lines to view). A 25-line display actually shows 24
lines because of the status line, so entering "<Ctrl><F3>W23"
places the window divider at the bottom of the screen. This
allows you to view the document in a nearly full edit screen,
but still see the tab sets.
Quick Bullets for WordPerfect
Bullets offer a crisp, professional-looking way to organize
memos or business letters, but dealing with character sets can
be a pain. Using WordPerfect, you can insert quick bullets
without worrying about character sets. Just press <ctrl>-W (the
compose key), and enter an asterisk as the first character. The
second character you enter determines the type of bullet
inserted: a period creates a small filled bullet; an asterisk a
medium filled bullet; lowercase "o" a small hollow bullet;
uppercase "O" a large hollow bullet.
Scaling Bit Mapped Graphics in Ventura
When you import a bit mapped graphic into ventura, the program
accurately reproduces the image's height to width ration and
fixed dot pattern. If you enlarge the graphic, the dot pattern
is often distorted. The solution ? Use integer multiples, whole
number multiples such as 2 or 3, when you resize a bit mapped
image. Ventura will then redraw the image with all the dots in
their proper places. Here's how to enlarge and crop a sample
Ventura graphic : 1) Start Ventura, switch to Frame mode and
draw a frame 3 inches square. 2) Select File Load Text / Picture
and load the CHANEL.IMG file found in the Typeset directory.
Ventura automatically fits the image int the frame. 3) Select
Frame Sizing & Scaling, then by Scale Factors. The "Scale Width"
line displays the images's width, 1.51 inches. To make the image
4 times larger, simply multiply the original width by 2 and
enter the total (3.02 inches) as the new scale width. Select OK,
and Ventura quadruples the size of the image. 4) To crop the
graphic, hold down <Alt> select the image and move it around
until it's displayed correctly inside the frame.
Print a Block
A little used WordPerfect command, lets you print a block of
text. First, press <Alt><F4> to mark a block (or use your
mouse). Next, press <Shift><F7>Y to send the block to the
printer.
Vertical Centering in Word
Many short documents, like letters, look better if they're
centered vertically on the page. This Word 5.0 macro does that
job with one keystroke. On a blank Word screen, enter the
following key strokes.
1) Press <Shift><F3> to begin record mode
2) Press <Shift><F10><ESC>FO<Cursor down>
3) Type "Centered" and press <ENTER><Cursor Up>
4) Press <Shift><F3> and type "VCenter.Mac"
(If you want to assign this macro to a hot key such
as <Ctrl>C, type the carrot "^" then press <Ctrl>C)
5) Press <ENTER>
6) Press <ESC>TGS<ENTER> to save the macro.
To use the macro, create a document, then press <Ctrl>C or if
you didn't assign it a hot key, press <ESC><F1>, and select
"VCenter.Mac" from the menu. The normal editing screen won't
show the difference, but if you press <Ctrl><F9>, you'll see the
text centered between the top and bottom of the page.
Better Pop Up Calculator
WordPerfect 5.1, includes a pop-up calculator macro, but you can
build a better one, using WordPerfect 5.1's new Table feature.
Follow these steps.
1) Press <Ctrl><F10> to start macro recording
2) Press <Alt>C and type "Calculator"
3) Press <ENTER>
4) Press <Alt><F7>TC1
5) Press <ENTER><ENTER>MF
6) Press <Ctrl><Page Up>P
7) Press <ENTER><ENTER>
8) Press <F7><Home><Home><Cursor Left><Back space>Y
9) Press <Ctrl><F10> to stop recording
To do a simple calculation, press <Alt>C (if working with reveal
codes on, press <Alt><F3>, before running the macro to turn this
mode off). A box will appear on the screen. Enter a formula,
using "+","-","*" and "/" operators. You can also include
parentheses for complex calculations. Press <ENTER> to paster
the result into the text.
Useful Block Commands
WordStar 5.0 and later, have some very useful block commands,
that don't always appear on the pull-down menus, but are still
well worth knowing. <Ctrl>K' (a single close quote), forces all
the characters, in a selected block, to lowercase. <Ctrl>K"
(Double quote) forces all characters, in a selected block, to
uppercase. <Ctrl>K. (a period), capitalizes the first letter of
a sentence and some single letter words, such as "I". <Ctrl>KM
is the block math, and will add up all values in a block. This
is used most often in the column mode, to total numbers. You can
use the <Ctrl>KM for other arithmetic functions, by preceding
the numbers with the desired math function, such as "-" for
subtraction, "*" for multiplication and "/" for division.
Pressing <ESC>= inserts the result into your document, at the
cursor position. <Ctrl>K? displays the number of words in a
block, as opposed to the <Ctrl>O? which displays the word count
in an entire document.
PageMaker Does Large Fonts
PageMaker 3.0 won't let you use any type, larger than 127
points. When you need type larger than this stature, say for a
banner or newsletter, bypass the limitation with one of the
following techniques. Though PageMaker, limits the size of its
own fonts, it lets you stretch graphics files and the text they
contain to any size. If you have a printer that can produce
oversized type, such as a PostScript or HP LaserJet III machine,
or a printer loaded with the oversized fonts, you need create
your banner or text in a draw program and import it into
PageMaker. Then enlarge the image by pressing the <shift> key
and using the mouse to stretch it. Draw programs such as Corel
Draw and Micrografx Designer, store images as vector graphics,
which don't distort when enlarged or reduced as do the bitmapped
graphic images created by paint programs. The problem with draw
programs is that PageMaker, while letting you enlarge and reduce
fonts, stored in this format as if they were graphics, treats
the images as fonts when it's time to print. To enlarge fonts
created with a draw program, you need a printer that supports
oversized fonts. If you don't have access to such a printer and
you don't want to buy additional fonts, create the font with a
paint program, such as PC PaintBrush or Windows Paint. For best
results, save the image in a high-resolution bit mapped graphic
format, such as TIFF. Next, import the image into PageMaker.
Treat it as you would any other graphic and enlarge it by
pressing the shift key and dragging on the corner of it, with
your mouse. For better results, print your banner from a machine
that supports oversized fonts. Then, scan that image onto a disk
and save it as a TIFF file. Then import and enlarge the image as
described above. Scan in the image larger than you ultimately
need it to be and then reduce it by pressing <Shift> and
dragging your mouse. Whether your type or scan the text into a
paint type program, remember, to limit distortion by cleaning up
the image with a pixel editor.
Documents in Living Color
It's no secret, that the easiest way to grab attention, is by
using color! The cost of printing in color, can quickly, leave
you in the red. There is, however, an easy cure to lost cost
color printing (color blues). One of the most efficient and
economical ways to "colorize" a newsletter, brochure or manual,
is to use SPOT COLOR. Full color printing, uses four inks; CYAN
(blue), MAGENTA (red), YELLOW and BLACK, to produce the full
range of colors required for continuous-tone images, such as
color photos. SPOT COLOR, requires only two color inks, one to
print most of a document, and another, to highlight items like
page borders, rules and boxes. Because SPOT COLOR, requires less
ink and work than full-color printing, it's much less costly. To
print SPOT COLOR documents, most businesses employ a
professional print shop. Not every quickie offset print shop can
handle the job. To specify which elements get which color, you
can use your page layout package to print out separate black and
white copies that correspond to each color, or you can simply
bring your master pages to the printer and point. If you need
just a handful of copies, it can be more economical to use an
in-house color printer and a color copier. Regardless of how you
print your document, you must first develop a SPOT COLOR
strategy, picking colors and deciding how to use them. Here are
some guidelines to help get you started.
~ Don't use SPOT COLOR haphazardly. Use it to organize pages and
to guide the readers eye toward important items.
~ Use color consistently, throughout a document, employing the
same color or color tint for similar types of headings, rules,
boxes and so forth.
~ Choose bright colors for newsletters or fliers, such as dollar
bill green, used for a financial newsletter. Use more subdued
colors, such as dark blue or maroon for business reports or
proposals.
~ If you're on a budget, choose standard colors, rather than pay
for ink mixing, for custom colors. At the print shop, examine
color samples printed on the paper stock you plan to use.
~ Make sure graphic elements such as borders, rules and boxes
are large enough to carry the color. For example, it's hard to
tell the difference between a black rule and a blue rule, if the
rule is less than 1 point thick.
~ Use SPOT COLOR for short, infrequent text items, such as logo,
large initial capitals, subheads and pull quotes. Headlines and
body text usually work best, in dark colors like black or navy
blue, which provide contrast and are easy to read.
~ When printing text against a SPOT COLOR background, use
reverse, or uncolored type. Because reverse type uses the color
of the paper instead of a second ink (such as black), you avoid
having colors overlap or misalign.
~ If the same color elements appear regularly in every document;
page borders, a masthead or logo, for example, you can save
money by having them preprinted. Since the SPOT COLOR is already
on the page, you pay for only one color (such as black) each
time you print a new document.
~ For a nominal charge, you can add the effect of a third color
to your document, by using a tint of the SPOT COLOR. For
example, use a 25% tint of a dark color (use higher percentages
with light colors) to set off a boxed item, such as a table of
contents.
~ Don't overdo it. For maximum impact, don't use SPOT COLOR for
more than 25% of the text and graphics on a page.
~ You can also add color to your document, by using a shade of
paper other than white. Just be sure to select a color that's
appropriate for your message and contrasts well with the colors
in your document.
Tutorial finished. Have you registered PC-Learn to receive your
bonus disks? Registration is encouraged. Shareware works on the
honor system! Send $25 to Seattle Scientific Photography,
Department PCL6, PO Box 1506, Mercer Island, WA 98040. Latest
version of PC-Learn and two bonus disks shipped promptly!