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A Guide to QuarkXPress:
Using QuarkXPress

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Legal Notices

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Quark, Inc., acknowledges with gratitude the efforts and contributions of all the
team members and departments involved in producing QuarkXPress™ software
and QuarkXPress Passport™ software and documentation, including: Product
Management, Program Management, Technical Writers, Quality Assurance,
Research and Development, Software Configuration Management, Common
Components, Technical Support and Worldwide Product Services. Quark also
thanks its alpha and beta testing partners for their help in testing QuarkXPress
and QuarkXPress Passport.
This manual was produced entirely with QuarkXPress Passport and
Quark Publishing System™ (QPS™).
LEGAL NOTICES
©2002 by Quark Technology Partnership as to the content and arrangement of this
material. All rights reserved.
©1986–2002 by Quark Technology Partnership and its licensors as to the technology.
All rights reserved.
Microsoft Reader Technology ©1999–2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Information in this document is subject to change without notice and does not represent
a commitment on the part of Quark Technology Partnership or its licensee, Quark, Inc.
Use of the Quark Products is subject to the terms of the end user license agreement or
other applicable agreements for such product/service. In the event of a conflict between
such agreements and these provisions, the relevant agreements shall control.
Quark Products and materials are subject to the copy right and other intellectual property
protection of the United States and foreign countries. Unauthorized use or reproduction
without Quark’s written consent is prohibited.
Quark, QuarkXPress, QuarkXPress Passport, QuarkXTensions, and XTensions are trademarks
of Quark, Inc. and all applicable affiliated companies, Reg. U.S. Pat. & Tm. Off. and in many
other countries. The Quark logo, QuarkCMS, and other Quark related marks which
Quark may adopt from time to time are trademarks of Quark, Inc. and all applicable
affiliated companies.
QPS and related marks are trademarks or registered trademarks of Quark, Inc., used
under license by Modulo Systems Corporation. Modulo Systems Corporation is a
Quark-related company.
FOCOLTONE and FOCOLTONE Colour System are registered trademarks of
FOCOLTONE. The concept, structure, and form of FOCOLTONE material and intellectual property are protected by patent and copyright law. Any reproduction in any form, in
whole or in part, for private use or for sale, is strictly forbidden. Contact FOCOLTONE, Ltd.
for specific patent information.
TRUMATCH, TRUMATCH Swatching System, and TRUMATCH System are trademarks
of TRUMATCH, Inc.
Color Data is produced under license from Dainippon Ink and Chemicals, Inc.
The HASP® system and its documentation are copyrighted by Aladdin Knowledge
Systems Ltd. ©1985 to present. All rights reserved.

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Legal Notices

Toyo Ink Mfg. Co., Ltd. is the copyright owner of TOYO INK COLOR FINDER ™ SYSTEM
AND SOFTWARE which is licensed to Quark, Inc. to distribute for use in connection
with QuarkXPress. TOYO INK COLOR FINDER ™ SYSTEM AND SOFTWARE shall
not be copied onto another diskette or into memory unless as part of the execution of
QuarkXPress. TOYO INK COLOR FINDER ™ SYSTEM AND SOFTWARE © Toyo Ink
Mfg. Co., Ltd., 1991. COLOR FINDER is registered or is in the process of registration as
the registered trademark of Toyo Ink Mfg. Co., Ltd. COLOR FINDER ™ computer video
simulation used in the product may not match the COLOR FINDER ™ book, and additionally some printer color used in the product may also not match. Please use the COLOR
FINDER ™ book to obtain the accurate color.
Quark, Inc. does not warrant, guarantee, or make any representations regarding the use or
the results of the use of any color system included in Quark products. Video simulations
may not match published color standards. Refer to current materials of the specific color
company (i.e., PANTONE, Inc.; FOCOLTONE, Ltd.; TRUMATCH, Inc.; TOYO INK,
Mfg. Co., Ltd.; or other companies involved in the process of color reproduction) for
accurate color samples.
Kodak is a trademark of Eastman Kodak Company.
Microsoft is either a registered trademark or trademark of Microsoft Corporation in the
United States and/or other countries and the Microsoft Reader logo is used under license
from Microsoft.
Adobe, Acrobat Reader, and Acrobat are registered trademarks of Adobe Systems
Incorporated in the United States and/or other countries.
Pantone® Colors displayed in the software application or in the user documentation may
not match PANTONE-identified standards. Consult current PANTONE Color Publications
for accurate color. PANTONE® and other Pantone, Inc., trademarks are the property of
Pantone, Inc. © Pantone, Inc. 2002.
Pantone, Inc. is the copyright owner of color data and/or software which are licensed to
Quark, Inc. to distribute for use in combination with QuarkXPress. PANTONE Color Data
and/or software shall not be copied onto another disk or into memory unless as part of
the execution of QuarkXPress.
QuickHelp™ is licensed from Altura Software, Inc. End User is prohibited from taking
any action to derive source code equivalent of QuickHelp, including reverse assembly
or reverse compilation.
All other trademarks are the properties of their respective owners.
T H I R D PA RT Y X T E N S I O N S S O F T WA R E D I S C L A I M E R
QUARK IS NOT THE MANUFACTURER OF THIRD PARTY XTENSIONS SOFTWARE
OR OTHER THIRD PARTY SOFTWARE OR HARDWARE (HEREINAFTER “THIRD
PARTY PRODUCTS”) AND SUCH THIRD PARTY PRODUCTS HAVE NOT BEEN CREATED, REVIEWED, OR TESTED BY QUARK, THE QUARK AFFILIATED COMPANIES
OR THEIR LICENSORS. (QUARK AFFILIATED COMPANIES SHALL MEAN ANY
PERSON, BRANCH, OR ENTITY CONTROLLING, CONTROLLED BY OR UNDER
COMMON CONTROL WITH QUARK OR ITS PARENT OR A MAJORITY OF THE
QUARK SHAREHOLDERS, WHETHER NOW EXISTING OR FORMED IN THE
FUTURE, TOGETHER WITH ANY PERSON, BRANCH, OR ENTITY WHICH MAY
ACQUIRE SUCH STATUS IN THE FUTURE.)

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Legal Notices

QUARK, THE QUARK AFFILIATED COMPANIES AND/OR THEIR LICENSORS MAKE
NO WARRANTIES, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, REGARDING THE QUARK
PRODUCTS/SERVICES AND/OR THIRD PARTY PRODUCTS/SERVICES, THEIR MERCHANTABILITY, OR THEIR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. QUARK, THE
QUARK AFFILIATED COMPANIES AND THEIR LICENSORS DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES RELATING TO THE QUARK PRODUCTS/SERVICES AND ANY THIRD
PARTY PRODUCTS/SERVICES. ALL OTHER WARRANTIES AND CONDITIONS,
WHETHER EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR COLLATERAL, AND WHETHER OR NOT, MADE
BY DISTRIBUTORS, RETAILERS, XTENSIONS DEVELOPERS OR OTHER THIRD
PARTIES ARE DISCLAIMED BY QUARK, THE QUARK AFFILIATED COMPANIES
AND THEIR LICENSORS, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTY
OF NON-INFRINGEMENT, COMPATIBILITY, OR THAT THE SOFTWARE IS ERRORFREE OR THAT ERRORS CAN OR WILL BE CORRECTED. THIRD PARTIES MAY PROVIDE LIMITED WARRANTIES AS TO THEIR OWN PRODUCTS AND/OR SERVICES,
AND USERS MUST LOOK TO SAID THIRD PARTIES FOR SUCH WARRANTIES, IF
ANY. SOME JURISDICTIONS, STATES OR PROVINCES DO NOT ALLOW LIMITATIONS ON IMPLIED WARRANTIES, SO THE ABOVE LIMITATION MAY NOT APPLY
TO PARTICULAR USERS.
IN NO EVENT SHALL QUARK, THE QUARK AFFILIATED COMPANIES, AND/OR
THEIR LICENSORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
ANY LOST PROFITS, LOST TIME, LOST SAVINGS, LOST DATA, LOST FEES, OR
EXPENSES OF ANY KIND ARISING FROM INSTALLATION OR USE OF THE QUARK
PRODUCTS/SERVICES, IN ANY MATTER, HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
THEORY OF LIABILITY. IF, NOTWITHSTANDING THE FOREGOING, QUARK, THE
QUARK AFFILIATED COMPANIES AND/OR THEIR LICENSORS ARE FOUND TO
HAVE LIABILITY RELATING TO THE QUARK PRODUCTS/SERVICES OR THIRD
PARTY PRODUCTS/SERVICES, SUCH LIABILITY SHALL BE LIMITED TO THE
AMOUNT PAID BY THE USER TO QUARK FOR THE SOFTWARE/SERVICES AT
ISSUE (EXCLUDING THIRD PARTY PRODUCTS/SERVICES), IF ANY, OR THE LOWEST
AMOUNT UNDER APPLICABLE LAW, WHICHEVER IS LESS. THESE LIMITATIONS
WILL APPLY EVEN IF QUARK, THE QUARK AFFILIATED COMPANIES, THEIR
LICENSORS AND/OR THEIR AGENTS HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF SUCH POSSIBLE
DAMAGES. SOME JURISDICTIONS, STATES OR PROVINCES DO NOT ALLOW
THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION OF INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, SO THIS LIMITATION OR EXCLUSION MAY NOT APPLY. ALL OTHER
LIMITATIONS PROVIDED UNDER APPLICABLE LAW, INCLUDING STATUTES OF
LIMITATION, SHALL CONTINUE TO APPLY.
IN THE EVENT ANY OF THESE PROVISIONS ARE OR BECOME UNENFORCEABLE
UNDER APPLICABLE LAW, SUCH PROVISION SHALL BE MODIFIED OR LIMITED
IN ITS EFFECT TO THE EXTENT NECESSARY TO CAUSE IT TO BE ENFORCEABLE.

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Table of Contents

Introduction

1

2

3

About this Book

xiii

Other Helpful Publications

xvi

QuarkXPress Basics

xvii

The Interface

xxii

Customizing QuarkXPress
Setting Default Values

1

Setting Preferences

3

Creating Kerning and Tracking Tables and
Hyphenation Exceptions

5

Saving QuarkXPress Preferences

6

Understanding Nonmatching Preferences

8

Using XTensions Software

12

Managing Print Styles and PPDs P

14

Using Apple Events Scripts — Mac OS Only

16

Layout Tools
Arranging Documents

18

Navigating Through Documents

20

Changing Document Views

23

Using the Pasteboard P

24

Using Rulers and Guides

25

Specifying Greeking

29

Document Basics
Creating New Print Documents P

30

Creating New Web Documents W

32

Opening Documents

34

Saving Documents

35

Saving Documents Automatically

37

Saving Revisions of Documents

39

Saving Documents as Templates

41

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4

5

Box Basics
Creating Boxes

43

Resizing Boxes

47

Reshaping Boxes

48

Moving Boxes

56

Framing Boxes

58

Coloring Boxes

69

Merging and Splitting Boxes

72

Filling and Converting Boxes

77

Understanding Symmetry and Smoothness

79

Line Basics
Creating Lines

85

Resizing Lines

88

Reshaping Lines

91

Moving Lines

98

Applying Line Styles
6

101

Manipulating Items
Selecting Items

106

Moving, Reshaping, and Resizing Items

107

Cutting, Copying, and Pasting Items

108

Clearing and Deleting Items

110

Undoing and Redoing Actions

110

Locking and Unlocking Items

111

Controlling the Stacking Order of Items

112

Grouping Items

114

Duplicating and Repeating Items

116

Spacing and Aligning Items

118

Rotating and Skewing Items

120

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7

Document Layout
The Elements of a Web Document W

122

Working with Master Pages

127

Formatting and Applying Master Pages

135

Changing Page Size and Facing-Pages Status P 139

8

9

Setting Page Properties W

140

Creating Multipage Spreads P

142

Numbering Pages and Sectioning Documents

145

Inserting, Deleting, and Moving Pages

146

Working with Text Chains

151

Creating “Continued” References P

155

Working with Columns

156

Copying Items and Pages Between Documents

158

Text Basics
Editing Text

162

Importing and Exporting Text

165

Finding and Changing Text

169

Finding and Changing Attributes

172

Changing Fonts in a Document

176

Checking Spelling

178

Using Auxiliary Dictionaries

182

Typography
Confirming Typographic Preferences P

184

Applying Character Attributes P

186

Specifying Kerning and Tracking

194

Applying Paragraph Attributes P

198

Specifying Alignment and Indentations P

199

Specifying Leading and Paragraph Spacing

202

Setting Tabs P

205

Controlling Widow and Orphan Lines P

208

Controlling Hyphenation and Justification P

210

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10

11

12

Working with Style Sheets P

218

Positioning Text in Text Boxes P

228

Principles of Web Typography W

233

HTML Text Boxes and Raster Text Boxes W

235

Graphics in Typography
Converting Text to Boxes

237

Running Text Around Items

240

Creating Text Paths

255

Creating Initial Caps

260

Creating Rules Above and Below Paragraphs

262

Anchoring Boxes and Lines in Text

265

Pictures
Understanding Picture File Formats

268

Importing Pictures

272

Saving A Page as an EPS File

276

Manipulating Pictures

279

Applying Contrast to Pictures

285

Applying Custom Halftone Screens
to Pictures P

288

Creating and Editing Clipping Paths

290

Listing and Updating Pictures

299

Configuring Picture Export Options W

302

Color
Understanding Spot and Process Colors P

305

Specifying Matching System Colors

306

Understanding Web-Safe Colors W

308

Creating and Editing Colors

309

Applying Color, Shade, and Blends

324

Using Color Management P

334

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Trapping
Understanding Trapping P

347

Trapping Guidelines P

349

Specifying Default Trapping P

349

Specifying Color-Specific Trapping P

353

Specifying Item-Specific Trapping P

357

Trapping EPS Pictures to Background Colors P 361
Creating and Using a Rich Black P
14

15

16

363

Tables
Creating Tables

366

Working with Cell Content

370

Formatting Tables

373

Manipulating Tables

376

Converting Tables to Text

378

Tables In Web Documents W

379

Layers
Creating Layers

381

Working with Layers

385

Displaying and Selecting Layers

390

Arranging Layers

395

Placing and Moving Items on Layers

397

Locking Items on Layers

399

Libraries
Creating New Libraries

401

Opening Libraries

402

Working with Libraries

403

Working with Labels

407

Saving Libraries

409

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18

Lists
Preparing Style Sheets for Lists

410

Creating and Editing Lists

411

Importing Lists from Another Document

414

Displaying Lists

417

Updating Lists

421

Working with Lists in Books

422

Indexes
Loading the Index QuarkXTensions Software P 425

19

Specifying the Index Marker Color P

426

Creating Index Entries P

427

Creating Cross-References P

430

Editing and Deleting Index Entries P

433

Building Indexes P

434

Editing Final Indexes P

437

Nested Index Quick Reference P

438

Run-in Index Quick Reference P

439

Books
Creating New Books

440

Opening and Saving Books P

441

Working with Chapters P

443

Controlling Page Numbers P

446

Synchronizing Chapters P

448

Printing Chapters P

451

Creating Indexes and Tables of Contents P

453

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20

Hyperlinks
Understanding Hyperlinks

454

Working with Destinations and Anchors

457

Creating, Editing, and Deleting Hyperlinks

463

Setting Preferences for Hyperlinks and Anchors 466

21

22

23

Showing and Hiding Hyperlinks and Anchors

468

Navigating with the Hyperlinks Palette

470

Interactive Web Elements
Working with Rollovers W

471

Working with Image Maps W

473

Working with Meta Tags W

477

Forms
Understanding HTML Forms W

488

Creating an HTML Form W

489

Adding Controls to a Form W

492

Creating a Menu W

503

Output
Printing a Web document W

505

Understanding DPI and LPI P

506

Specifying Print Options:
The Print Dialog Box P

509

Specifying Print Options:
The Print Dialog Box Tabs P

511

Creating and Using Print Styles P

526

Specifying the Setup for Imagesetters P

528

What is a RIP? P

529

Updating Picture Paths P

530

Printing Odd-Sized Documents P

530

Creating a PostScript File P

533

Preparing Documents for Service Bureaus P

534

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24

25

Previewing and Exporting Web Pages
Previewing a Web Page W

538

Exporting a Web Page W

540

QuarkXPress Passport
QuarkXPress Passport Terms

542

Managing Language Files

543

Specifying the Program Language

544

Assigning Languages to Paragraphs

545

Checking Spelling in Multilingual Documents

546

Hyphenation Methods

547

Saving Documents with Multiple Languages

549

Appendices
Alerts — Mac OS

552

Alerts — Windows

571

XPress Tags

589

Cross-Platform Issues

602

Print/Web Conversion Issues

604

Glossary
Index

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About this Book

Introduction
From a simple brochure to highly complex corporate communications, QuarkXPress
encourages you to challenge the boundaries of professional publishing, both in print
and on the Web. With superior color capabilities, exceptional picture handling, and
precise typographic controls, QuarkXPress increases your publishing power.

ABOUT THIS BOOK
“A Guide to QuarkXPress: Using QuarkXPress” is not meant to be read cover to
cover. The book is designed so that you can look things up quickly, find out what you
need to know, and get on with your work. However, if you need more comprehensive
information about electronic publishing, that is also provided.
WHERE WE’RE COMING FROM

This book assumes you are familiar with your computer and know how to:
• Launch an application
• Open, save, and close files
• Use menus, dialog boxes, and palettes
• Use the mouse, keyboard commands, and modifier keys
If you need help performing any of these tasks, consult the documentation
resources (user or reference guides) provided with your computer.
HOW TO USE THIS BOOK

This book offers steps for specific tasks. It includes concept blocks, which
provide helpful background information about various features so you can
familiarize yourself with related concepts before beginning a task.
Whenever you think to yourself, “I wonder how to do this…,” check this book,
Using QuarkXPress. The detailed table of contents at the beginning of this book
and the index should help you quickly find the information you need.
Each chapter in this book includes a series of specific tasks, such as “Creating
New Documents” or “Importing Pictures.” Instructions for accomplishing tasks
are presented in steps or as bulleted lists. Tips with useful information about
QuarkXPress are frequently included on these pages.

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About this Book

CONCEPT BLOCKS

Background information about publishing tasks and concepts are also provided
throughout this book. The first word in the title of a concept block is usually
“Understanding,” for example: “Understanding Picture File Formats.” You can
read concept blocks any time — they’re designed to round out your knowledge
of electronic publishing without relating to a specific task.
W H AT Y O U ’ R E L O O K I N G AT

This book uses various conventions (styles) to help you find
information quickly:
BOLD TYPE STYLE

The names of QuarkXPress menu commands, dialog boxes, and other controls
are set in bold type. For example: “The Colors palette lets you apply colors or
inks to text, pictures, lines, and box backgrounds.”
REFERENCES AND ARROWS

Whenever a feature is mentioned, a reference shows you how to access that
feature. For example: “The Save as dialog box (File menu) lets you save a copy
of a document.” Arrows are used to represent the menu path to a feature.
For example: “Choose File & Print to display the Print dialog box.”

Choosing File & Print.
ICONS

The names of tools and graphic buttons are followed by the appropriate icons.
For example: “Select the Item tool e in the Tools palette” or “Click the Center
button } in the Measurements palette.”

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About this Book

CHARTS

This book charts the range of values that any control can accept. Charts follow
this format:
RANGE

MEASUREMENT SYSTEM

SMALLEST INCREMENT

2 to 720 pt

various (", pt, cm, etc.)

.001

The “Range” is expressed in the default measurement system. You can enter
values in fields using the measurement system described in the “Measurement
system” column. For example, measurements may be expressed in pixels,
points, or any measurement system supported by QuarkXPress. (The example
above shows a feature that accepts any supported measurement system.) The
“Smallest increment” is the smallest unit of measurement you can enter.
MAC OS AND WINDOWS REFERENCES

QuarkXPress is designed to incorporate the same features on Mac OS and
Windows. This guide is designed to be used with QuarkXPress on either
platform. While most of the information in this guide applies to both platforms,
operating system differences occasionally require the application to function in
a slightly different manner on Mac OS and Windows. In such a situation, this
guide identifies which functions are unique to Mac OS and which functions are
unique to Windows.
PRINT AND WEB MODES

QuarkXPress lets you create documents both for printed output and for the
Web. When you’re working on a print document, QuarkXPress is in print mode;
when you’re working on a Web document, QuarkXPress is in Web mode. The
mode determines which tools, features, and other user interface elements
are available. In this guide, features that are unique to print documents are
identified with a Picon, and features that are unique to Web documents
are identified with a Wicon.
NOTES AND TIPS

∫

Notes provide helpful information about particular features.

å

Tips provide extra information about particular features and general techniques
for electronic publishing.

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Other Helpful Publications

O T H E R H E L P F U L P U B L I C AT I O N S
The QuarkXPress product includes various electronic documents to assist you in using
QuarkXPress 5.0. You can find these documents on the QuarkXPress CD-ROM. Quark
also provides QuarkXPress training on the World Wide Web to help you familiarize
yourself with the various features of QuarkXPress.
A G U I D E T O Q U A R K X P R E S S : I N T E R FA C E O V E R V I E W

If you stumble on an unfamiliar command, or want more information about
how to use a tool, check the book A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview. The
file name is “Interface Overview.pdf” on your QuarkXPress CD-ROM. A Guide to
QuarkXPress: Interface Overview explains the QuarkXPress interface, including
menus and dialog boxes, tools, palettes, and preferences. Commands are documented in menu order, starting with the first command in the File menu.
W H AT ’ S N E W I N Q U A R K X P R E S S 5 . 0

If you are a proficient QuarkXPress user, start with the file “What’s New
in 5_0.pdf,” found on the QuarkXPress CD-ROM. It provides a brief overview
of the new features in this version of QuarkXPress to get you started with your
new software as quickly as possible.
OTHER PIECES IN THE BOX

Your QuarkXPress product also includes installation and user registration
instructions, service plan information, a list of keyboard commands, and
documentation for any late-breaking features.
QUARKXPRESS TRAINING ON THE WEB

QuarkXPress online training is a Web-based tutorial that will take you
through the process of applying specific QuarkXPress features to sample
QuarkXPress documents.
If you have little or no experience with QuarkXPress and you want to begin
learning about it, these online training exercises will teach you the basic skills
necessary to create print and Web documents using this application. Experienced
users may also find the lessons useful for learning features that are new to
QuarkXPress 5.0, such as layers, tables, and the Web document features.
You can find the QuarkXPress online training on the Quark™ Web site at
www.quark.com. All you need to view the online training is an Internet
connection with Web browser version 4.0 or later (for example, Microsoft™
Internet Explorer or Netscape Navigator). To perform the training exercises,
you need QuarkXPress or a demo version of QuarkXPress.

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QuarkXPress Basics

QUARKXPRESS BASICS
To use QuarkXPress effectively, you need to understand a few basic concepts. Read this
section if you are new to QuarkXPress or if you need a quick refresher. If you are new to
QuarkXPress, we recommend that you complete the online training exercises available
on the Quark Web site, www.quark.com, to familiarize yourself with the individual
QuarkXPress features.
PRINT AND WEB MODES

QuarkXPress lets you create documents both for print and the Web. When
you’re working on a print document, QuarkXPress is in print mode; when
you’re working on a Web document, QuarkXPress is in Web mode. The mode
determines which tools, features, and other user interface elements are available.
In this manual, features that are unique to print documents are identified
with a Picon, and features that are unique to Web documents are identified
with a Wicon.
∫

Some print features can be used in Web documents. To use print features
in Web documents, see “The Elements of a Web Document” in Chapter 7,
Document Layout.”
PRINT DOCUMENT ENVIRONMENT P

A work area called the pasteboard surrounds each page or spread. You use
the pasteboard to store items temporarily or to experiment with something
before you put it on a page. You can have individual pages or multipage
spreads, and you can add, move, and delete pages as you work. Pages can be
manipulated using the Document Layout palette or the Page menu, and in
Thumbnails view.
WEB DOCUMENT ENVIRONMENT W

A page in a Web document has no fixed size; it expands as necessary to make
room for the items it contains. However, you can use the page width guide as
a guideline to make sure the pages you design will fit on your users’ monitors.
Gray regions at the bottom and right of the page indicate the page’s true
boundaries, but keep in mind that different Web browsers often display
the same page differently.
There are no pasteboards in a Web document. Pages can be manipulated using
the Document Layout palette or the Page menu.

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QuarkXPress Basics

BASIC TOOLS

QuarkXPress pages contain items. Items are text boxes, text paths, picture boxes,
tables, and lines; they are created in QuarkXPress and manipulated primarily
with the Item tool e. Contents are text and pictures; they are manipulated
primarily with the Content tool E.
In general, you will use Item menu commands and the left half of the Measurements palette when working with items. Likewise, you will use the Style menu
and the right half of the Measurements palette when working with contents.

The controls in the Measurements palette change according to the current selection —
whether it is a text box, picture box, text path, line, text, or picture.

THE BOX CONCEPT

In QuarkXPress, most things go into a box. Text is contained in text boxes and
pictures are contained in picture boxes. Text can also be placed on a path. You
have control over the size, shape, layering, color, and other properties of each
box or path — and you have similar control over the text or pictures contained
in them.
TA B L E S

A table is a series of rectangular, grouped boxes — called “cells” — that you
can use to present data in a concise format. QuarkXPress lets you create
tables, convert text to tables, easily edit table data, and add or remove rows
and columns as necessary. The cells can contain text, pictures, or have a
content of None.
L AY E R S

By letting you control which items display on a page, layers make it easier for
you to edit and manipulate documents. The Layers palette lets you place all
items on the same layer or create different layers for different items. You can
display some layers while hiding others, so you can opt to see only those items
that you want to edit at a given time.
WORKING WITH TEXT P

A text box or a text path contains text. To create a text box or path, use any of
the text box creation tools T, Å, ı, Ç, Î, ´, or Ô, or a text path creation
tool , Ò, Â, or ˜. Then use the Get Text command (File menu) to import
text files from other sources, including many popular word processors, databases, and spreadsheets. To enter your own text into a text box, select a text
box with the Content tool E and begin typing.
When you are working with text, the Style menu provides formatting
options such as fonts, type styles, and colors. High-end typographic controls

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are provided through a combination of menu items, keyboard commands,
and preferences. To simplify text formatting, you can create paragraph and
character style sheets (Edit & Style Sheets) and apply them using a menu
command, the Style Sheets palette, or keyboard commands.
To flow text from one text box to the next (or from one text path to the next),
you can create an automatic chain of text. You can also use the Linking u and
Unlinking U tools to manually create custom text chains. To create an automatic text chain, check Automatic Text Box in the New Document dialog box
(File & New & Document).
WORKING WITH TEXT IN WEB DOCUMENTS W

The typographic effects available in HTML are more limited than those available
within QuarkXPress. You can create text boxes that contain formatted HTML
text, or you can use the full range of typographic effects by converting text
boxes and text paths to graphics at export. If you export a large amount of your
text as graphics, be aware that this will increase the size of your page and the
page’s downloading time.
PLACING PICTURES

“Picture” is a general term for any type of graphic file in a QuarkXPress document. Just as text boxes contain text, picture boxes contain pictures. To create
a picture box, use any of the picture box creation tools p, x, O, å, 7, ƒ,
or ∂. Then, use the Get Picture command (File menu) to import a copy of a
picture file. You can also paste a picture that has been copied to the Clipboard
into your document.
When you are working with pictures, the Style menu provides formatting
choices such as contrast, line screen, and colors. Picture formatting options are
selectively available depending on the imported picture’s graphic file format.
E X P O RT I N G P I C T U R E S W

When you export a Web document as an HTML file, all pictures in that
document are converted to either JPEG, GIF, or PNG format, regardless of their
previous format. You can control the format in which each picture is exported.
Text boxes and paths can also be exported as pictures. You can control the
export format of these items, as well.
SHAPES AND LINES

To create a colored shape, create a picture box with any kind of shape and apply
a color to the background of the box. Background colors are applied to boxes
using the Colors palette (View menu) or the Box tab of the Modify dialog box
(Item menu). The Merge and Shape controls (Item menu) let you create boxes
with multiple contours and combine different boxes.

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Create custom line styles using the Dashes & Stripes dialog box (Edit menu);
then use line creation tools o, œ, ∞, or § to draw the lines. When a line is
selected, the Modify dialog box and the Style menu provide options (such as
style, width, and arrowheads) for formatting lines.
E L E C T R O N I C PA S T E - U P

Items can be moved, resized, reshaped, and layered with other items. You can
drag items into place by aligning them with rulers and guides, or you can enter
precise X and Y coordinates in the Measurements palette.
Each type of item has its own Modify dialog box (Item menu) that controls
the size, position, background color, position of the contents, and more. To
flow text around pictures, lines, and other items, use the Runaround tab in
the Modify dialog box. Other Item menu commands let you group items so
they can be moved together, change the stacking order of items, duplicate
items, and space selected items evenly.

When you choose Item & Modify, a dialog box specific to the selected item displays.
The various tabs in the Modify dialog box provide access to different sets of controls.
FORMS AND IMAGE MAPS W

Web documents can contain forms, which allow readers to send information to
the Web server. Forms let readers enter information about themselves or order
goods and services over the Internet.
Web documents can also contain image maps. An image map is an HTML
feature that lets you link to different pages by clicking on different parts of
a picture in a Web page.

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M A S T E R PA G E S A N D T E M P L AT E S

Items (pictures and text) that recur throughout your document can be placed
on master pages. Applying a master page to a document page automatically
places the recurring items. For example, if you are working on a newsletter,
you might want a master page for the cover and masthead, one for the inside
spreads, and one with mailing information for the back page. Master pages
can be created, edited, and applied using the Document Layout palette.
Once you’ve established the formatting of a publication, you can save a
document as a reusable template.
CUSTOMIZING QUARKXPRESS

QuarkXPress has many options for customizing how you work, how your text
flows, how your tools work, and more. These are called “preferences,” which
you can customize for your copy of QuarkXPress (application preferences) and
for individual documents (document preferences).
In addition to preferences, you can create custom style sheets, colors, dashes
and stripes, lists (based on style sheets), and hyphenation and justification
specifications for use in a document or template. All these specifications are
created through commands in the Edit menu.
PRINTING P

The Print dialog box (File menu) offers several output options. For convenience,
you can combine all these settings and save them as Print Styles (Edit menu).
When you print, QuarkXPress requires all the font and picture files used in the
document. The Collect for Output (File menu) feature automatically gathers
the document, pictures, and fonts into one folder, and it produces a report of
the document’s fonts, colors, trapping, and other settings — ready for output.
E X P O RT I N G A S H T M L W

When you export a Web document in HTML format, QuarkXPress exports
any necessary accompanying files (such as picture files), too. You can also
export HTML templates, which let you insert XML content into a page and
automatically format that content as HTML.
P O W E R T H R O U G H PA L E T T E S A N D K E Y B O A R D C O M M A N D S

As you use QuarkXPress, you will develop your own working style. Perhaps you
will prefer to use the mouse and menu commands for everything; you may find
that you prefer the quick access to features provided by palettes and extensive
keyboard commands. In many cases, QuarkXPress offers multiple ways to
perform a given task.

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T H E I N T E R FA C E
QuarkXPress menus and dialog boxes adhere to Mac OS and Windows conventions —
with a few enhancements. This section provides a quick look at standard interface
controls, and highlights features unique to QuarkXPress. If you are new to Mac OS or
Windows, we recommend that you consult the documentation resources provided with
your computer for complete information about using the operating system. If you are
new to QuarkXPress, we recommend that you complete the online training exercises,
available on the Quark Web site at www.quark.com, to familiarize yourself with the
individual QuarkXPress features.
QUARKXPRESS MENUS

The menu bar displays the menus available in QuarkXPress: File, Edit, Style,
Item, Page, View, Utilities, Window (Windows only) and Help. The menu bar
can also display menus for QuarkXTensions™ software and third-party XTensions™
software. Each menu contains groups of related commands separated by lines.
Many menu entries are followed by keyboard shortcuts, displayed using the
Command (C), Option (`), Control (^), and Shift (w) keys on Mac OS, or
the Ctrl, Alt, and Shift keys on Windows.

Like other QuarkXPress menus, the File menu contains groups of related commands
separated by lines.

QuarkXPress menus are context-sensitive, which means that menu items change
according to the active item, the current situation, or the selected tool:
• The commands listed under a menu may change. For example, the Style menu
commands change depending on whether text, a picture, or a line is active.

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• An individual menu command may change. For example, the Undo command
(Edit menu) changes to reflect your last action (such as Undo Typing or
Undo Item Deletion).
• The availability of menu entries may change. For example, when a picture is
selected, the Save Text command (File menu) is not available.
• The availability of entire menus may change. For example, the Style menu
items for text are available only when a text box is active and the Content
tool E is selected.
• The function of a menu command may change slightly when you press a
modifier key while displaying the menu. For example, on Mac OS, pressing
Option while you choose the Item menu changes the Send to Back command
to Send Backward.
CONTEXT MENUS

To save production time while working with documents, QuarkXPress also
includes special menus called context menus. Context menus are keyboardactivated and context-sensitive, so they respond dynamically to the task
at hand.
• To display a context menu on Mac OS, press the appropriate keyboard
command and click the object you want to affect. The default keyboard
command is Control+click. You can switch this keyboard command with
the Zoom keyboard command (Control+Shift+click) using the buttons in
the Control Key area in the Preferences dialog box Interactive pane
(Edit & Preferences & Preferences).
• To display a context menu on Windows, right-click the object you want
to affect.

When you display a context menu by clicking empty space on a document page, options
that are relevant to the entire document display in the menu.

å

Context menus are available for rulers, empty space on a document page,
picture boxes, text boxes and text paths, lines, tables, and many palettes.
In print documents, a context menu is available for the pasteboard.

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CHECKMARK

A checkmark j in a menu indicates one of the following:
• A function has been performed. For example, a checkmark displays next to
Flip Vertical (Style menu) when the contents of a box are flipped vertically.
• A feature is turned on. For example, a checkmark next to Snap to Guides
(View menu) means that items in your document will snap to the guides
you’ve created.
• A format from a list has been applied. For example, a checkmark displays in the
Font submenu next to the font applied to selected text. When multiple formats
have been applied to a selection, checkmarks only display next to formats
common to the entire selection.

The checkmark next to Flip Vertical in the Style menu for text indicates that the contents of
the active text box are flipped vertically.

QUARKXPRESS DIALOG BOXES

Choosing a menu item followed by ellipsis points (…) displays a dialog box.
Dialog boxes contain related commands that allow you to specify exactly what
you want to happen. The context-sensitive controls in QuarkXPress dialog
boxes consist primarily of tabs, areas, fields, pop-up menus, radio buttons,
check boxes, and buttons.

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The Modify dialog box (Item menu) includes tabs, areas, fields, pop-up menus, check boxes,
and buttons.
TABS

Many dialog boxes provide multiple functions through tabs. By clicking a
tab icon, you can display different sets of controls. Pressing C+Option+Tab
on Mac OS or Ctrl+Tab on Windows takes you to the next tab in a dialog box.
AREA

Related commands within a dialog box or tab are grouped into an “area,”
which is named and surrounded by a border. For example, the Box tab in the
Modify dialog box (Item menu) has a Blend area, which lets you specify a
custom blend for a box.

The Box tab of the Modify dialog box (Item menu) includes a bordered Blend area.

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LIST

Some dialog boxes include scrollable lists of elements that you can select or edit.
For example, the Colors dialog box (Edit menu) displays a list of colors. You can
navigate through lists using the up and down arrow keys. Depending on the
type of list, you may be able to multiple-select items to edit. For example, in the
Tools pane of the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences),
you can select multiple tools and edit common attributes. To select a group
of consecutive elements, click the first element then press Shift while clicking
the last element in the range. To select multiple, nonconsecutive elements,
press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while clicking each one.
FIELD

A field is a rectangular box for entering a specific value. For example, in the
Text tab of the Modify dialog box (Item menu), you can enter the number
of columns for an active text box in the Columns field. Fields have the
following characteristics:
• You can enter measurements in any of the supported measurement systems,
using the following abbreviations: inches or inches decimal ("), picas (p),
points (pt), millimeters (mm), centimeters (cm), ciceros (c), and agates (ag).
• When you are not using the default measurement system, you only need to
specify units of measure with an abbreviation. For example, if your measurement preferences are set to inches, and you want to specify an indentation in
points, you can enter “6 pt” in the field. The measurement will be converted
to inches the next time you open the dialog box.
• The default measurement system is specified in the Horizontal and Vertical
pop-up menus in the Measurements pane of the Preferences dialog box
(Edit & Preferences & Preferences & Document).
• You can press Tab to select the next field in a dialog box and Shift+Tab to select
the previous field.
• You can perform mathematical operations in fields using these operators:
+ (addition), – (subtraction), * (multiplication), or, / (division). For example, to
double the width of a box, you can multiply the width by 2 by entering *2 to
the right of the current value. You can even perform multiple operations —
such as dividing a value by 4, then adding 2.

You can perform mathematical operations in QuarkXPress fields. The formula in the Width field
multiplies the width of the box by 2, then adds 1 point. The formula in the Height field divides
the height of the box by 2, then subtracts .25 inch.

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∫

QuarkXPress performs multiplication and division first, followed by subtraction
and addition, from left to right; you cannot use parentheses when performing
mathematical operations in fields. You can add and subtract specific measurements, such as 2".
POP-UP MENU

A pop-up menu
is a small menu within a dialog box or palette.
A pop-up menu contains a list of options and may also have an editable field
in which you can enter a custom value (such as a percentage) or a word (such
as a font name) rather than choosing an option from the list.

A pop-up menu offers a list of options, and often includes a field where you can enter
custom values. For example, the Width pop-up menu in the Frame tab of the Modify
dialog box (Item menu) includes a list of frame widths and a field.
CHECK BOX

A check box lets you turn options on ` and off ,. Checking a box may
activate other controls; checking or unchecking a box may expand a dialog
box to display more controls.
RADIO BUTTON

A radio button
lets you select from among mutually exclusive options.
For example, in the XTensions pane of the Preferences dialog box (Edit &
Preferences & Preferences), you can choose when to display the XTensions
Manager dialog box by clicking a radio button.
BUTTON

A button (shaped like this
on Mac OS or
on Windows), performs
an action. If a button has a heavier border around it, such as
on Mac OS
or
on Windows, you can also press Return or Enter (Mac OS) or Enter
(Windows) to activate it. On Windows, if a button has a dotted outline around
the text
, you can also press the space bar to activate the button. A button

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may also include a pop-up menu
that lets you choose a type of action.
For example, the New button in the Style Sheets dialog box (Edit menu) lets
you create either a character style sheet or a paragraph style sheet.
Many dialog boxes in QuarkXPress include an Apply button so you can preview
your changes before closing the dialog box. For example, the Apply button
in the Paragraph Attributes dialog box (Style & Formats) lets you see how
your changes affect selected paragraphs.
N AV I G AT I O N A L D I A L O G B O X E S

The Open and Save as dialog boxes are used to open, import, export, or save
files; they include standard Mac OS or Windows controls for navigating through
disks and folders so you can locate files, or choose where you want to save files.
Dialog boxes in QuarkXPress with Open or Save as navigational dialog box
elements include: New Web Document, New Library, New Book, Open,
Save as, Get Text, Save Text, Append, Save Page as EPS, Export HTML,
Collect for Output, and Auxiliary Dictionary.

The Save as dialog box (File menu) is an example of a navigational dialog box. It includes
the current disk name, the Eject, Desktop, New Folder, Cancel, and Save buttons, pop-up
menus for file type and version, a scroll list for navigating through folders, and the Include
Preview check box (Mac OS only).

A L E RT D I A L O G B O X E S

An alert is a dialog box that warns you when there is a problem and often
suggests a solution. For example, if you enter an invalid value in a field, an
alert notifies you and often provides an acceptable range of values for the
field. For a list of alerts you may encounter in QuarkXPress, see the “Alerts”
sections of Chapter 26, “Appendices.”

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Chapter 1: Customizing QuarkXPress
Your publication uses picas, while another uses inches. You only work with text and
you need typographer’s quotation marks, but your colleague only works with output
and needs specific trapping settings. Fortunately, QuarkXPress can accommodate all
these needs.
Since everyone’s work environment has different demands, and every individual has
personal preferences, QuarkXPress provides a variety of options for customizing the
way it works. You can set application default settings and preferences, modify the
“XPress Preferences” file, add features with XTensions software, and automate
manual processes on Mac OS with Apple events scripts. If you invest the time to set
up QuarkXPress to suit your needs, you will be more comfortable working with the
application and save hours of time producing your documents.

S E T T I N G D E FA U LT VA L U E S
QuarkXPress uses a variety of default settings as the basis for all new documents.
These default settings include style sheets, colors, hyphenation and justification
specifications, lists, dashes and stripes, and the default auxiliary dictionary. You can
modify the default settings by changing them when no documents are open. If you
change any of these default settings when a document is open, the change is saved
only with the document. To modify the default application settings:

1 Make sure no documents are open, then choose an option from the Edit
menu to modify the default settings: Style Sheets, Colors, H&Js, Lists,
Dashes & Stripes, Print Styles P, Meta Tags W, or Menus W. For specific
information about the controls in any of the dialog boxes mentioned, see
Chapter 4, “Edit Menu” and Chapter 9, “Utilities Menu,” in A Guide to
QuarkXPress: Interface Overview.
• Style Sheets: Edit the π Normal paragraph style sheet and the Ø Normal
character style sheet (the default style sheets for all new text boxes). Create
new style sheets to include with all new documents.
• Colors: Create colors to include with all new documents and delete colors that
will not be used (for example, you may want to delete Red, Green, and Blue).
You cannot edit or delete Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black, or white. You can edit,
but not delete, Registration. You can edit the default trapping for colors as well.

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• H&Js: Edit the Standard hyphenation and justification specification to specify
default automatic hyphenation rules and word and character spacing values.
The Normal style sheet uses the Standard hyphenation and justification
specification by default. Create new hyphenation and justification specifications
to include with all new documents.
• Lists: Lists are generated from text that uses the character or paragraph style
sheets you specify. Create new lists to include with all new documents.
• Dashes & Stripes: Edit the default line and frame patterns and create new
patterns to include with all new documents. You cannot edit or delete the
Solid line.
• Print Styles: Print styles allow you to specify frequently used print settings and
apply them to documents much as you apply style sheets. P
• Meta Tags: Meta tags contain information about a Web page. They’re not
displayed in a Web browser, but adding meta tags to your Web documents
can make it easier for search engines to index your pages. Create new meta
tag sets to be incorporated into exported HTML pages. W
• Menus: A menu is a list of items that can display in a list control or a pop-up
menu control within a form box. You can use menus to let users choose from
a list of options, or you can create navigation menus where each item has a
corresponding URL. Create new menus to be used in forms that are part of
QuarkXPress Web documents. W

2 To choose a default auxiliary dictionary for all new documents, choose
Utilities & Auxiliary Dictionary. Use the dialog box to locate an auxiliary
dictionary and click Open. Or, click New to create a default auxiliary dictionary.

3 When you are finished modifying default settings, create a new document.
All your modifications are reflected in the new document. You can still
modify these settings in individual documents.
∫

Print styles are always saved with the application preferences, even if you have
a document open when you create or edit a print style.

å

Each time you create a new document, all the settings in the New Document
dialog box (File & New & Document) or New Web Document dialog box
(File & New & Web Document) become the new default settings. Any palettes
that are open when you quit QuarkXPress, including library palettes, will be
open the next time you launch QuarkXPress.

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SETTING PREFERENCES
QuarkXPress uses a variety of default preferences as the basis for all new documents.
For example, you can specify the measurement system displayed on horizontal and
vertical rulers. You can modify the default preferences by changing them when
no documents are open. Default preferences can be modified in the panes of the
Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences).
M O D I F Y I N G A P P L I C AT I O N P R E F E R E N C E S

The controls in the Application panes of the Preferences dialog box affect the
way QuarkXPress works with all documents — for example, how it displays and
saves documents. These settings are saved with the application and are never
saved with documents. To modify application preferences:

1 Choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences to display the Preferences
dialog box.

2 Click the items in the list at the left to display different types of preferences. For
specific information about the controls in any of the panes, see Chapter 4,
“Edit Menu,” in A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview.
• The Display pane provides options for how guides, documents, picture
previews, and so on, display on-screen.
• The Interactive pane lets you control scrolling and several text
handling options.
• The Save pane provides features for automatically saving documents, saving
revisions of documents, saving libraries, and saving the document position.
• The XTensions Manager pane lets you control whether the XTensions
Manager dialog box displays when you launch QuarkXPress.
• The Browsers pane (Mac OS) allows you to specify which Web browsers you
want to use to preview your Web documents. W

3 Click OK to close the Preferences dialog box and save your changes. The
changes take effect immediately.
∫

Print styles are always saved with the application preferences, even if you have
a document open when you create or edit a print style.

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å

To provide maximum flexibility, QuarkXPress saves various default settings and
preferences in different ways. Default settings such as style sheets are saved in
the “XPress Preferences” file (inside the “Preferences” folder). Default settings for
Web documents are saved in the “Web Preferences” (“Web.prf”) file (also inside
the “Preferences” folder). For information about saving preferences, see
“Saving QuarkXPress Preferences” in this chapter.
Application preferences and default document preferences are saved in the
“XPress Preferences” file. For information about application and document
preferences, see “Saving QuarkXPress Preferences” in this chapter.

MODIFYING DOCUMENT PREFERENCES

The Document panes in the Preferences dialog box affect the way certain
QuarkXPress features work with documents — for example, whether pages
are inserted automatically when text overflows and how colors trap. If you
modify settings in the Document panes of the Preferences dialog box when
no documents are open, the settings become application default settings and
affect all new documents. However, if you modify document settings when a
document is open, the settings are applied to and saved only with the active
document. To modify default document preferences:

1 Make sure no documents are open.
2 Choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences to display the Preferences
dialog box.

3 In the list on the left, click the items under Default Document or Default Web
Document to display panes containing different sets of document preferences.
For specific information about the controls in any of the panes, see Chapter 4,
“Edit Menu,” in A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview.
• The General pane lets you specify default settings for greeking, guides, master
page items, auto picture import, framing, hyperlink and anchor color, and
automatic page insertion.
• The Measurements pane lets you specify a default measurement system.
• The Paragraph pane lets you specify the default settings for paragraph-based
typography features, including leading, baseline grid, and hyphenation method.
• The Character pane lets you specify the default settings for character-based
typography features, including ligatures (Mac OS only), automatic kerning, and
the size and position of superscript, subscript, small caps, and superior characters.

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• The Tools pane lets you specify the default settings for the Zoom tool Z and
each item creation tool. For example, you can specify the minimum and maximum view for the Zoom tool, and you can specify the default background color
for boxes and the default style for lines. You can also reset the tools to the
original default settings.
You can double-click any item creation tool or the Zoom tool Z in the Tools
palette to display the Tools pane in the Preferences dialog box. In the Tools
pane, you can select multiple tools and edit their preferences simultaneously.
Press Shift while you click to select a consecutive range of tools; press C
(Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while you click to select nonconsecutive tools.
You can modify any attributes common to all the selected tools.
You can specify settings for the Image Map tools and the Form tool in the
Tools pane under Default Web Document.
• The Trapping pane lets you specify the values QuarkXPress uses when trapping
print documents automatically. By specifying trapping relationships between
colors, you can avoid the white areas that can occur when printing plates are
misaligned or when paper shifts or stretches on a commercial printing press. P
• The Layer pane lets you specify whether new layers should maintain their
runaround, be visible, be locked, or have their printout suppressed. (You can
only suppress items in print documents.)

4 When you are finished modifying default preferences, create a new document.
All your modifications are reflected in the new document. You can modify
preferences for individual documents by choosing Edit & Preferences &
Preferences when a document is open.

C R E AT I N G K E R N I N G A N D T R A C K I N G TA B L E S A N D
H Y P H E N AT I O N E X C E P T I O N S
You can modify default settings for kerning table information, tracking table
information, and hyphenation exceptions. If you change any of these default settings when a document is open, the change is saved with the document and in the
“XPress Preferences” file. For information about saving preferences, see “Saving
QuarkXPress Preferences” and “Understanding Nonmatching Preferences” in this
chapter. To modify kerning tables, tracking tables, and hyphenation exceptions:

1 If you are planning to edit kerning tables or tracking tables, make sure the
Kern-Track Editor QuarkXTensions software is running. (For information about
loading XTensions modules, see “Using XTensions Software” in this chapter.)

2 Make sure no documents are open.

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3 Edit any of the following default settings:
• To edit the default kerning tables, choose Utilities & Kerning Edit. Use the
Kerning Edit dialog box to modify kerning pairs for individual fonts.
• To edit the default tracking tables, choose Utilities & Tracking Edit. Use the
Tracking Edit dialog box to modify the tracking tables for individual fonts.
• To create or modify the default list of hyphenation exceptions, choose
Utilities & Hyphenation Exceptions.

4 When you are finished modifying default settings, create a new document.
All your modifications are reflected in the new document.
∫

Creating kerning and tracking tables can be time-consuming. You could lose
your kerning and tracking tables if the “XPress Preferences” file becomes
damaged. To avoid losing your settings, routinely make backup copies of
your “XPress Preferences” file.
For specific information about the controls in the Kerning Edit dialog box,
the Tracking Edit dialog box, or the Hyphenation Exceptions dialog box,
see Chapter 9, “Utilities Menu,” in A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview.

SAVING QUARKXPRESS PREFERENCES
QuarkXPress is a powerful application that offers many options for controlling document display and text flow. Because each person has different needs, QuarkXPress lets
each user or organization store and use favorite settings in the “XPress Preferences” file.
The “XPress Preferences” file, located in the QuarkXPress application folder, includes
default sets of style sheets, colors, hyphenation and justification specifications, lists,
dashes and stripes, and print styles; default auxiliary dictionary path information;
application preference settings; document preference settings; kerning tables; tracking
tables; hyphenation exceptions; XTensions Manager settings; and PPD Manager
settings. These different types of settings and preferences are saved in the “XPress
Preferences” file in different ways.
CHANGES TO QUARKXPRESS PREFERENCES

Changes to QuarkXPress preferences are handled in the following ways:
• If you make changes to application preferences (Edit & Preferences &
Preferences & items listed under Application) with or without documents
open, the changes are saved in the “XPress Preferences” file and immediately
affect all open documents and all subsequently opened documents.

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• If you make changes to XTensions Manager (Utilities menu) settings with or
without documents open, the changes are saved in the “XPress Preferences” file
and affect all documents after you relaunch QuarkXPress.
• If you make changes to PPD Manager (Utilities menu) settings with or
without documents open, the changes are saved in the “XPress Preferences”
file and immediately affect all open documents and all subsequently
opened documents. P
• If you make changes to document preferences (Edit & Preferences &
Preferences & items listed under Document or Web Document) with a
document open, the changes are saved only with the active document.
• If you choose a different auxiliary dictionary with a document open, the change
is saved only with the active document.
• If you make changes to the kerning table information, tracking table information, and hyphenation exceptions in a new document, these changes are saved
with the active document and in the “XPress Preferences” file.
• If the Nonmatching Preferences alert displays when opening a document and
you click Use XPress Preferences, changes you make to the kerning table
information, tracking table information, and hyphenation exceptions will
be stored both in that document and in the “XPress Preferences” file.
N O N M AT C H I N G P R E F E R E N C E S A L E RT

QuarkXPress displays the Nonmatching Preferences alert when you open a
document that was last saved with kerning table information, tracking table
information, or hyphenation exceptions that are different from the settings
contained in the current “XPress Preferences” file. You have the option of using
the settings in the document or those in the “XPress Preferences” file.

The Nonmatching Preferences alert displays when you open a document with kerning
table information, tracking table information, or hyphenation exceptions that are different
from the settings in the current “XPress Preferences” file.

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Saving QuarkXPress Preferences

USE XPRESS PREFERENCES BUTTON

If you click Use XPress Preferences, the preference information that had been
saved with the document is ignored. Text may reflow because of different automatic kerning or tracking information, or different hyphenation exceptions.
Changes you make to these settings while the document is active are stored
both in the document and in the “XPress Preferences” file.
The advantage of the Use XPress Preferences feature is that the document will
be based on the same kerning table information, tracking table information,
and hyphenation exceptions as your other documents.
After clicking Use XPress Preferences in the Nonmatching Preferences
alert, look over the document and see what has happened to it. If the reflow
or changes are undesirable, choose File & Revert to Saved. The Nonmatching
Preferences dialog box will display again and you can click Keep
Document Settings.
KEEP DOCUMENT SETTINGS BUTTON

If you click Keep Document Settings, text will not reflow. Automatic kerning,
tracking, or hyphenation exception changes made while the document is active
will be stored only with the document. The Keep Document Settings feature
is useful if you want to open and print a document without running the risk
of text reflow.

U N D E R S TA N D I N G N O N M AT C H I N G P R E F E R E N C E S
When you open a document in QuarkXPress, you will sometimes see the Nonmatching Preferences alert. If you are unfamiliar with this dialog box, it may
seem alarming. Understanding the two choices in the dialog box (Use XPress
Preferences and Keep Document Settings) will help you decide which option
to choose.
T H E N O N M AT C H I N G P R E F E R E N C E S D I A L O G B O X

Let’s say you’ve just brought a document over to a co-worker’s computer so
you can print it to their laser printer. But when your co-worker opens your
document, an alert is displayed: “Some settings saved with this document
are different from those in the ‘XPress Preferences’ file.” Below this are two
buttons: Use XPress Preferences and Keep Document Settings. What do
you do?

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Understanding Nonmatching Preferences

When you see the Nonmatching Preferences alert, it means your document’s
preferences are different from the preferences stored in the “XPress Preferences”
file that is currently installed. Since all the preferences in question are stored
with the document, you can avoid any reflow problems by clicking Keep
Document Settings — but are you sure this is what you want to do? Before you
can answer that question, you need to know a little more about what’s in the
“XPress Preferences” file and how it works.
å

If you click Use XPress Preferences in the Nonmatching Preferences alert, look
over the document and see what has happened to it. If the reflow or changes are
undesirable, choose File & Revert to Saved. The Nonmatching Preferences
alert will display again and you can click Keep Document Settings.

W H AT ’ S I N T H E X P R E S S P R E F E R E N C E S F I L E ?

Let’s take a look at what the “XPress Preferences” file contains. (We have divided
the list into three groups according to how they are saved.)
GROUP A

• Kerning tables (Utilities & Kerning Edit)
• Tracking tables (Utilities & Tracking Edit)
• Hyphenation exceptions (Utilities & Hyphenation Exceptions)
GROUP B

• Default style sheets, colors, dashes and frames, lists, and hyphenation and
justification specifications (Edit menu)
• Settings in the Document panes of the Preferences dialog box (Edit &
Preferences & Preferences)
• Path information for the default auxiliary dictionary (Utilities &
Auxiliary Dictionary)
GROUP C

• Print styles (Edit & Print Styles)
• Settings in the XTensions Manager and PPD Manager dialog boxes
(Utilities menu)
• Settings in the Application panes of the Preferences dialog box (Edit &
Preferences & Preferences)

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GROUP A: CHOOSE YOUR BUTTONS WITH CARE

If the Nonmatching Preferences alert displays when you open a document, it
means that one or more of the document’s group A settings are different from
those in the current “XPress Preferences” file. This means that your document
could look different depending on whether or not you choose to use the document’s settings. For example, a sentence that should end on page three could
end on page four instead because of differences in kerning or tracking.
So which button do you click? If you want the document to look exactly the
same on your co-worker’s computer as it did on your computer, click the Keep
Document Settings button. (This is always the appropriate choice for opening
documents at a service bureau.)
However, if you click the Keep Document Settings button, the Nonmatching
Preferences alert will continue to display every time your friend opens this
document on his or her machine. If another user is going to be keeping the file
from now on, this could become tedious. If you click Use XPress Preferences
and resave the document, the Nonmatching Preferences alert will no longer
display when the document is opened on the other user’s computer because you
will have replaced the document’s preferences with those in the current “XPress
Preferences” file. However, you should only click Use XPress Preferences if:
• The document’s kerning, tracking, and hyphenation need to be consistent with
other documents produced on this computer, or;
• The document’s kerning, tracking, and hyphenation are relatively unimportant.
If you click Use XPress Preferences, look through the document before you save
it. Look for the overflow symbol t in text boxes, for undesirable line breaks, and
for any other changes.
G R O U P B : N O A L E RT, N O P R O B L E M

If your settings for group B (style sheets, colors, hyphenation and justification specifications, and so on) are different from those in another user’s
“XPress Preferences” file, the Nonmatching Preferences alert will not display.
The document’s settings will be used automatically, and any changes you make
to those settings will apply to that document only.

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G R O U P C : D O N ’ T W O R RY A B O U T I T

Like group B, differences among group C settings (print styles, PPD information,
and so on) will not cause the Nonmatching Preferences alert to display.
The information does not affect individual documents and is not saved
with documents.
W H E R E A R E P R E F E R E N C E C H A N G E S S AV E D ?

• Any changes you make to the settings in group A or B while no documents are
open are stored in the “XPress Preferences” file, and are used for all subsequently
created documents.
• Any changes you make to the settings in group B while a document is open are
saved with that document only.
• Any changes you make to settings in group C are always stored in the “XPress
Preferences” file, whether or not a document is open.
• If the Nonmatching Preferences alert displays when you open a document,
and you click Use XPress Preferences, subsequent changes you make to settings in group A are saved to both the document and the “XPress Preferences”
file. (The document’s original group A settings are discarded when you click
Use XPress Preferences.)
• If the Nonmatching Preferences alert displays when you open a document, and
you click Keep Document Settings, subsequent changes you make to settings in
group A are saved only with the document.

∫

Standard bitmap frames (those included with QuarkXPress) will not generate a
nonmatching preferences alert. A document containing standard bitmap frames
will open and retain its bitmap frames. However, since only QuarkXPress 4.x
and earlier have the ability to use Frame Editor and bitmap frames, you cannot
edit the bitmap frames or add them to your default “XPress Preferences” file.
Custom bitmap frames (created in Frame Editor) will generate a nonmatching
preferences alert; just like standard bitmap frames, you cannot edit them or add
them to your default “XPress Preferences” file.

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Using XTensions Software

U S I N G X T E N S I O N S S O F T WA R E
XTensions modules are add-on software that enhance the features of QuarkXPress.
Examples of XTensions software included with QuarkXPress are the filters used to
import and export text in the formats of many word processing applications, the
Kern-Track Editor, and Custom Bleeds. In addition to the QuarkXTensions modules
that come with QuarkXPress, third-party software developers have created many
XTensions modules to meet specialized publishing needs.
SPECIFYING WHICH XTENSIONS MODULES TO USE

The XTensions Manager dialog box (Utilities menu) lets you control which
XTensions modules are loaded with QuarkXPress. XTensions software consume
RAM (memory), so you should run only the ones you need. To specify which
XTensions modules to use:

1 Choose Utilities & XTensions Manager. The dialog box lists all the
XTensions software in the “XTension” folder and the “XTension Disabled”
folder within your QuarkXPress application folder.

Use the XTensions Manager dialog box (Utilities menu) to specify which XTensions modules
should load and to create sets of XTensions modules.

2 To specify which XTensions modules load, you can choose a default set,
temporarily change the status of individual XTensions modules, or create
a new set.
• To choose a default set, use the Set pop-up menu. Choose All XTensions
Enabled to let QuarkXPress load all your XTensions software. Choose All
XTensions Disabled if you don’t want any XTensions software to load.
• To change the status of individual XTensions modules, click in the Enable
column or choose Yes or No from the Enable pop-up menu. To edit the status
of multiple XTensions modules: Press Shift while you click to select consecutive

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Using XTensions Software

XTensions modules; press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while you click to
select nonconsecutive XTensions modules.
• To create a new set of XTensions software based on those currently enabled,
click Save As and enter a name in the Enter name for current set field.
The new set will display in the Set pop-up menu for future use.

3 Click OK; relaunch QuarkXPress to load the new XTensions set.
å

When you install QuarkXPress, all included XTensions modules are enabled by
default. To conserve RAM, you should carefully review the XTensions modules
that are running and disable any that you will not be using.
Pressing the space bar while launching QuarkXPress displays the XTensions
Manager dialog box so you can specify which XTensions modules will load. The
XTensions Manager pane in the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences &
Preferences) lets you control the default display of the XTensions Manager
dialog box at launch.
If you have various clients or documents that require different XTensions software, you can create a different XTensions software set for each situation.

I M P O RT / E X P O RT F I LT E R S

QuarkXPress provides import/export filters that let you transfer files between
QuarkXPress and popular word processing applications. You can also save and
import ASCII files, including those with XPress Tags information. Supported text
file formats include Microsoft Word, RTF (Windows only), and WordPerfect.
QuarkXPress also includes import filters for certain picture file formats,
including PhotoCD.
Import/export filters are actually XTensions software and are controlled by the
XTensions Manager dialog box (Utilities menu). To import text or pictures in
any of these formats, or to export text in any of these formats, the appropriate
import/export filters must be loaded.
Q U A R K X T E N S I O N S S O F T WA R E

QuarkXPress includes several QuarkXTensions modules that add core features
to the application, including the Index QuarkXTensions module, and the
Kern-Track Editor.
T H I R D - PA RT Y X T E N S I O N S S O F T WA R E

Hundreds of third-party software developers are currently producing a wide
range of XTensions software that let QuarkXPress meet specialized publishing
needs. Custom XTensions modules are also available for advertising agencies,
graphic designers, newspaper publishers, magazine publishers, database
publishers, and output providers.

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Managing Print Styles and PPDs

MANAGING PRINT STYLES AND PPDS P
QuarkXPress lets you customize printing features by saving output settings as print
styles and controlling which PostScript Printer Description files (PPDs) load with
QuarkXPress. The print styles and PPD information are stored in the “XPress
Preferences” file. To create and use print styles, see Chapter 23, “Output.”
C R E AT I N G A N D E D I T I N G P R I N T S T Y L E S P

Print styles are predefined output setups you can choose from the Print Style
pop-up menu in the Print dialog box (File & Print). Print styles are not document-specific; they are global preferences that can be saved, exported, imported,
and used with any QuarkXPress document. To create or edit a print style:

1 Choose Edit & Print Styles.

Use the Print Styles dialog box (Edit menu) to create and edit print styles for use with all
your documents. Use the Export button to share print styles with other users.

2 Edit the Default print style to reflect the print settings you use the most.
Create new print styles to include with all new documents.

3 Click Save.
å

If you click either the Print or Capture Settings button in the Print dialog box,
the current print settings are saved with the document when you save
(File & Save) the document.

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Managing Print Styles and PPDs

SPECIFYING WHICH PPDS TO USE P

PostScript Printer Description files (PPDs) let you choose device-specific features
for a particular PostScript printer, such as an alternate paper size and optimized
screen values. Printer manufacturers provide PPDs for their printers. If you do
not have a PPD for your device, you can use one of the three default PPDs:
Generic B&W, Generic Color, or Generic Imagesetter.
PPDs are accessed through the Printer Description pop-up menu in the
Page Setup dialog box (File menu). You can control which PPDs display in
the Printer Description pop-up menu by using the PPD Manager dialog
box (Utilities menu). To specify which PPDs are available:

1 Choose Utilities & PPD Manager.

Use the PPD Manager dialog box (Utilities menu) to specify which PPDs are available.

2 Click Select (Mac OS) or Browse (Windows) in the System PPD Folder area
to specify the folder that contains the PPDs you want to access. By default,
QuarkXPress accesses the PPDs in the following folder:
• Mac OS: The “Printer Descriptions” folder in the “Extensions” folder within
your System Folder.
• Windows: The “System” folder in the “Windows” folder. (Windows NT:
Win_NT & System 3x & Spool & Drivers & w32x86 & 0 [zero])

3 To specify which PPDs are accessible, click in the Include column or choose
Yes or No from the Include pop-up menu. To edit the status of multiple
PPDs: Press Shift while you click to select a consecutive range of PPDs; press
C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while you click to select a nonconsecutive
range of PPDs.

4 Click OK; changes take effect immediately.

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Managing Print Styles and PPDs

å

Each time you launch QuarkXPress, the application looks at all the PPDs available to see if any have been added, deleted, or changed. If you have many PPDs,
QuarkXPress may take longer to launch.
To speed launch time, remove PPDs that you do not need. Look in the “Printer
Descriptions” folder inside the “Extensions” folder (Mac OS) or the “System”
folder inside the “Windows” folder (Windows) and in the “PPD” folder (if you
have one) in your QuarkXPress application folder. Place any unnecessary PPDs
in a different folder.

U S I N G A P P L E E V E N T S S C R I P T S — M A C O S O N LY
Apple events scripts are small programs that let you automate repetitive tasks,
customize QuarkXPress, and link QuarkXPress to other applications. Publishers use
scripts for everything from simple text formatting to complex database publishing.
Writing scripts requires some programming knowledge and dedication to learning a
scripting language. Once scripts are written, anyone can use them to enhance their
productivity in QuarkXPress.
WRITING SCRIPTS

Scripts written for QuarkXPress are based on the Apple Events Object Model, a
common language that lets Mac OS applications talk to each other. Objects are
the elements of an application (for example, a picture box); each object has
specific capabilities. Events are verbs that tell objects what to do. Depending
on the capabilities of the object, it can perform different events.
To write scripts, you combine objects with events. Essentially, you are giving
orders to specific objects. The syntax is defined by the scripting language you
use: AppleScript™ or UserTalk (in UserLand Frontier). For information
about writing scripts for QuarkXPress, see the documentation in the Apple
Events Scripting folder on the QuarkXPress CD-ROM.

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Using Apple Events Scripts — Mac OS Only

USING SCRIPTS

Consult your Mac OS or scripting software documentation for information
about the system extensions that must be running for you to use scripts. The
various methods for accessing and running scripts depend on how the script
was created. For example, you can create a drag-and-drop application that will
run when you drop QuarkXPress files on it. Or, you can use XTensions software
to add a menu or palette to QuarkXPress that provides access to your scripts.
å

For information about writing scripts for QuarkXPress, see the documents in the
Apple Events Scripting folder on the QuarkXPress CD-ROM.
AppleScript ships with most versions of Mac OS. UserLand Frontier is available
from many online services.

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Arranging Documents

Chapter 2: Layout Tools
You can arrange flowers by placing them directly in a vase or by carefully positioning
each one. The flowers placed directly in the vase look good, but the carefully positioned
flowers can be a masterpiece of design. QuarkXPress operates on a similar principle,
letting you position items by clicking and dragging the mouse or by using layout tools
for precision and control. Clicking and dragging is intuitive and can look great, but
when you need to create a complex design, the precision tools will serve you best.
QuarkXPress provides a number of on-screen layout tools that allow extreme precision
in arranging your items, as well as a variety of controls that help you arrange documents on-screen and navigate through documents. Using these tools and controls
will help you make each document a triumph of design.

ARRANGING DOCUMENTS
QuarkXPress lets you automatically arrange open documents on-screen by giving you
options to control the way open documents are displayed. You can stack or cascade
documents, you can tile documents, or you can stack or tile all open documents to
a specific view size. The Windows submenu (View menu) on Mac OS and the
Window menu on Windows provide access to these display controls.
ARRANGING DOCUMENTS ON MAC OS

On Mac OS, you can use the Windows submenu (View & Windows) to control
the way open windows are displayed on-screen. The first section of the submenu
lets you specify how open documents are displayed:
• To display open documents stacked to the right and down, choose View &
Windows & Stack Documents. The Stack Documents command layers multiple open documents so a small portion of each document’s menu bar displays.
• To reduce the size of each window and distribute them evenly on your screen(s),
choose View & Windows & Tile Documents. The Tile Documents command
resizes document windows so that equal portions of all open documents display
on-screen. The active document always displays in the upper left part of the
monitor; the most recently active documents are displayed from left to right and
top to bottom. If Tile to Multiple Monitors is checked in the Display pane of
the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences), you can use
more than one monitor for tiling documents.

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Arranging Documents

The second section of the Windows submenu lists all open documents and
lets you choose which one to display. You can also display the Clipboard if
it is open.
To change all documents to the same view when stacking or tiling, press the
following modifier keys while you choose Stack Documents or Tile Documents
(View & Windows). You must press the modifier key before you click the menu
bar to choose View.
ç

å

KEYBOARD COMMANDS
S TA C K O R T I L E T O D O C U M E N T V I E W

KEYBOARD COMMAND

Actual Size

Control

Fit in Window P

C

Thumbnails P

Option

Press Shift while clicking a document’s title bar to display the
Windows submenu.
To drag thumbnails of pages between documents, the document windows must
be resized so each is showing and each document must be in Thumbnails view.
You can accomplish this quickly by pressing Option while you choose View &
Windows & Tile Documents, or press Option+Shift while you click a document’s title bar and choose Tile Documents. P
ARRANGING DOCUMENTS ON WINDOWS P

On Windows, you can use the Window menu to control the way open windows
are displayed on-screen. The first section of the submenu lets you specify how
open documents are displayed:
• To display open documents stacked to the right and down, choose Window &
Cascade. The Cascade command layers multiple open documents so a small
portion of each document’s title bar displays.
• To resize document windows so they all display stacked from top-to-bottom on
the screen, choose Window & Tile Horizontally.
• To resize document windows so they all display side-by-side, with the title bars
adjacent to each other beginning at the top of the screen, choose Window &
Tile Vertically.
If four or more documents are open, the Tile Horizontally and Tile Vertically
commands arrange document windows so all open documents and an open
Clipboard display on-screen. The active document is always displayed in the
upper left or top of the monitor.

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Arranging Documents

To change all documents to the same view when cascading or tiling, press
the following modifier keys while you choose Cascade, Tile Horizontally,
or Tile Vertically from the Window menu.
ç

å

KEYBOARD COMMANDS
S TA C K O R T I L E T O D O C U M E N T V I E W

KEYBOARD COMMAND

Actual Size

Ctrl+Alt

Fit in Window P

Ctrl

Thumbnails P

Alt

When multiple documents are open, press Ctrl+Tab to move through all open
documents. To switch to the previous document, press Ctrl+Shift+Tab.

N A V I G AT I N G T H R O U G H D O C U M E N T S
QuarkXPress provides several ways to navigate through a document: Page menu
commands, the Page field, Document Layout palette icons, the go-to-page pop-up
menu, and scroll bars. After experimenting with the various options, you will find a
method that works best for you.
U S I N G PA G E M E N U C O M M A N D S

The Page menu commands let you “turn” the pages of a document, jump to
specific pages, and display master pages.
• To turn the pages of a document, choose Previous, Next, First, or Last from
the Page menu.

å

When any tool except the Zoom tool is selected, and Caps Lock is not turned
on, you can press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) to access the Page Grabber
Hand H. The Page Grabber Hand H lets you scroll through a page in any
direction by dragging the mouse. In a print document, you can use the Page
Grabber Hand H to scroll to another page.
• To display a specific document page, choose Page & Go to (C+J on Mac OS,
Ctrl+J on Windows). Enter the number of the page you want to display in the
Go to Page field and click OK.

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Navigating Through Documents

∫

If your print document is divided into sections, precede the page number you
enter with the prefix characters you specified for the section in the Prefix field
of the Section dialog box (Page & Section). You can also specify absolute page
numbers in the Go to Page dialog box. An absolute page number indicates the
page’s actual position in a document, regardless of any sectioning or special
numbering. To specify an absolute page number, precede the number you enter
in the Go to Page dialog box with a plus (+) sign.
• To display a master page, choose Page & Display. From the Display submenu,
choose the master page you want to display. To display the document page again,
choose Document from the Display submenu.

å

To display the top of the first page of a document, press Home (Mac OS) or
Ctrl+Page Up (Windows).
To scroll up one screen, press Page Up.
To scroll to the top of the previous page, press Shift+Page Up.
To scroll down one screen, press Page Down.
To scroll down to the top of the next page, press Shift+Page Down.
Mac OS only: To display the bottom of the last page of the document, press End.
To display the top of the last page of the document, press Shift+End (Mac OS)
or Ctrl+Page Down (Windows).

U S I N G T H E D O C U M E N T L AY O U T PA L E T T E

The Document Layout palette lets you display document pages and master
pages by clicking icons. To display the Document Layout palette, choose
View & Show Document Layout (F10 on Mac OS, F4 on Windows). To display
a master page, double-click its icon (in the middle portion of the palette). To display a document page, double-click its icon (in the lower portion of the palette).

Double-click icons in the Document Layout palette (View menu) to display a document
page or a master page.

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U S I N G T H E PA G E F I E L D

The Page field in the lower left corner of the document window is editable. To
display a specific page, select the number in this field and enter a new number.

Select the number in the Page field (in the lower left corner of the document window) and
enter a new page number.

U S I N G T H E G O - T O - PA G E P O P - U P M E N U

In addition to the Document Layout palette, QuarkXPress provides a pop-up
menu of page icons in the lower left corner of the document window. Click
the Page pop-up arrow , next to the Page field to display the go-to-page
pop-up menu. Drag to select master pages (on the left) and document pages
(on the right).

Click the Page pop-up arrow , in the lower left corner of the document window to display
icons for document pages and master pages.

SCROLLING THROUGH A DOCUMENT

You can navigate through a document using the scroll boxes and the scroll
arrows on the right edge and bottom of the document window. In a print
document, you can change pages using these scroll boxes and scroll arrows;
however, because pages in a Web document have no fixed height, you cannot
scroll to another page in a Web document.
• To use a scroll box, click and drag it. If you use the scroll box to change pages
in a print document, the Page field in the lower left corner of the document
window updates.
• To use the scroll arrows, click an arrow to scroll incrementally in that direction
(up, down, right, or left). Click and hold an arrow to scroll through the
page continuously.

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Navigating Through Documents

å

To improve speed while scrolling, check Speed Scroll in the Interactive pane of
the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences).
The QuarkXPress Speed Scroll feature greeks pictures and displays two-color
blends in a single color while you are scrolling. It redraws them when you
stop scrolling.
You can set a preference to “live scroll” when you drag a scroll box. During
a live scroll, the document window is updated automatically and displays
the document as you drag the scroll box. To use live scroll all the time, check
Live Scroll in the Interactive pane of the Preferences dialog box (Edit &
Preferences & Preferences).
Mac OS only: To toggle Live Scroll, press Option before you click the scroll bar
and while you drag it. If Live Scroll is checked, pressing Option will disable it.
If Live Scroll is unchecked, pressing Option will enable it.

CHANGING DOCUMENT VIEWS
QuarkXPress lets you reduce or enlarge the document view in .1% increments. You can
switch between predefined page views using menu commands and keyboard commands,
you can enter a custom view percentage, and you can enlarge specific areas using the
Zoom tool Z.
C H O O S I N G A P R E D E F I N E D PA G E V I E W

To specify a predefined page view, choose an option from the View menu:
50%, 75%, Actual Size (C+1 on Mac OS, Ctrl+1 on Windows), or 200%.
In a print document, you can also choose Fit in Window (C+0 on Mac OS,
Ctrl+0 on Windows) or Thumbnails (Shift+F6)
å

When Thumbnails (View menu) is selected, you can reposition pages by dragging them to a different location in the document. You can also drag pages to
another open document that is also displaying pages in Thumbnails view. P
E N T E R I N G A C U S T O M V I E W P E R C E N TA G E

To specify a document view other than one listed in the View menu, select
the number in the View Percentage field (Control+V on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+V
on Windows) in the lower left corner of the document window. Enter a value
and press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Mac OS or Windows).

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USING THE ZOOM TOOL Z

To enlarge the document view in preset intervals, select the Zoom tool Z and
click on the document. To reduce the document view in preset intervals, press
Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) while you click the Zoom tool Z. To specify
the portion of the document you want to zoom in on or out from, use the
Zoom tool Z to drag a marquee around the area you want to view.
∫

You can customize the zoom increment and the maximum and minimum
reduction and enlargement values obtainable with the Zoom tool Z by
specifying values in the Tools pane of the Preferences dialog box (Edit &
Preferences & Preferences).

å

You can temporarily select the Zoom tool Z by pressing Control+Shift (Mac OS)
or Ctrl+space (Windows). On Mac OS, this key command can be changed to
Control in the Control Key area of the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences & Interactive pane). Press Control+Option (Mac OS) or
Ctrl+Alt+space (Windows) to zoom out.
Windows only: The maximum zoom percentage depends upon the Display DPI
Value (Edit & Preferences & Preferences & Display pane). If the value is set
above 85 dpi, the maximum zoom percentage decreases. For example, a value
of 96 dpi restricts the maximum zoom percentage to 692%.

U S I N G T H E PA S T E B O A R D P
The pasteboard is the nonprinting area that surrounds individual pages and spreads.
The pasteboard can function both as a work area and as a temporary storage area. You
can create items and groups on the pasteboard, then drag them from the pasteboard
onto a document page. You can also use the pasteboard to “bleed” an item off a page.
å

The pasteboard is not available in Web documents.
U S I N G T H E PA S T E B O A R D A S A W O R K A R E A P

You construct and modify items and groups on the pasteboard just as you
would a document page. You can drag items from a pasteboard to any other
document page or pasteboard. The pasteboard works as follows:
• To create items on the pasteboard, scroll left or right so that a page’s pasteboard
area displays. Create, position, and group items on the pasteboard just as you
would on a document page.
• To move an item from the pasteboard to a document page or another pasteboard,
select the Item tool e, click the item, and drag it into position.

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Using the Pasteboard

• You can move an item so that it is partially off the left or right edge of the
pasteboard. When you do so, the portion that you move off the edge is not
visible. It is not possible to move an item completely off the pasteboard.
• When you drag out a horizontal ruler guide and release the g pointer over
the pasteboard, the guide displays across the pasteboard and all the pages in a
spread. If you release the g pointer when it is positioned over a document page,
the guide displays only on that page.

å

You may find it convenient to store items on the pasteboard until you are ready
to place them on a document page. If you plan to store a variety of items,
consider using a library. To create a library, see Chapter 16, “Libraries.”
U S I N G T H E PA S T E B O A R D F O R B L E E D S P

Bleed is the term used to describe items that are printed to the edge of a finished
page. You can create a bleed item with QuarkXPress by extending it from a
document page onto the pasteboard, and then entering the distance you want
to extend the bleed in the Print dialog box Bleed field (File & Print &
Document tab). Once a page with bleed elements is reproduced on press, a
commercial printer can trim the document to its finished page size.

∫

You can specify the size of the pasteboard by entering a percentage value in the
Pasteboard Width field in the Display pane of the Preferences dialog box
(Edit & Preferences & Preferences). By default, the area of the pasteboard to
the left and to the right of a page or spread is equal to the document’s page
width, and .5" of pasteboard displays above and below pages and spreads.
When the width of the widest horizontal spread in a document approaches 48",
the width of the pasteboard areas to the right and to the left of the spread is
reduced to stay within the 48" document width limit.

USING RULERS AND GUIDES
The rulers and guides in QuarkXPress give you precise control for document layout.
You can control the measurement system displayed on rulers and you can customize
the color of guides. QuarkXPress provides margin guides and column guides for aligning
text, and lets you create all the ruler guides you need for aligning items. To ensure that
items are placed properly, you can “snap” items to guides.
D I S P L AY I N G R U L E R S A N D G U I D E S

Use the View menu commands to display rulers and guides. To display rulers,
choose View & Show Rulers (C+R on Mac OS, Ctrl+R on Windows). To display
guides, choose View & Show Guides (F7).

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∫

By default, margin guides and column guides display as blue lines on color monitors and as dotted gray lines on black-and-white monitors. Ruler guides display
as green lines on color monitors and as dotted gray lines on black-and-white
monitors. You can specify different colors for margin and ruler guides and
the baseline grid in the Display pane of the Preferences dialog box (Edit &
Preferences & Preferences).
You can display page guides either In Front of or Behind all items, depending
on the setting you choose from the Guides area in the General pane of the
Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences).

SPECIFYING THE MEASUREMENT SYSTEM FOR RULERS

To specify ruler measurement units, choose options from the Horizontal
and Vertical pop-up menus in the Measurements pane of the Preferences
dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences).
The Vertical and Horizontal options you choose are used by QuarkXPress in
all fields that indicate position values. For example, if you choose Inches from
the Vertical pop-up menu and Picas from the Horizontal pop-up menu, the
value in the Origin Down field (in item specification dialog boxes) displays in
inches; the value in the Origin Across field displays in picas.
You can specify different measurement units for your print documents and
Web documents.
å

The Snap to Guides feature helps you quickly align items with ruler guides and
page guides. When Snap to Guides is checked (View menu), an item or Item
Creation pointer c snaps to a guide when you drag it within the snap distance.
The Snap Distance is specified in pixels in the General pane of the Preferences
dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences).
SPECIFYING COLUMN GUIDES AND MARGIN GUIDES P

QuarkXPress automatically places column guides and margin guides in all new
documents. You specify their position in the Column Guides and Margin
Guides fields in the New Document dialog box (File & New & Document).
When a master page is displayed in the document window, you can use the
Master Guides dialog box (Page & Master Guides) to change the placement
of column guides and margin guides.

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Using Rulers and Guides

If you check Automatic Text Box in the New Document dialog box (File &
New & Document), the values you specify in the Margin Guides area define
the size and placement of the automatic text box. The values you specify in the
Column Guides area define the columns for the automatic text box. If you
do not check Automatic Text Box when you open a new document, column
guides are displayed, but the values are not applied to any text box.
å

Margin guides and column guides information is stored as part of a master page.
To reposition margin guides and page guides in an existing document, display
the master page that contains the guides you want to reposition, then choose
Page & Master Guides. The Master Guides dialog box displays. Edit the values
in the Margin Guides and Column Guides area of the Master Guides dialog
box to reposition margin and column guides on the master page and on all
document pages based on that master page.
S P E C I F Y I N G T H E PA G E W I D T H G U I D E W

QuarkXPress automatically places a page width reference guide in all new documents to indicate the right edge of the design area. You specify the default
page width for a document in the Layout area of the New Web Document
dialog box (File & New & Web Document).
• To specify a page width that is the same for all browser windows, enter a value
in pixels in the Page Width field or choose a standard width value from the
pop-up menu.
• To specify a page width that depends on the width of the browser window, check
Variable Width Page. Enter a percentage value in the Width field to indicate how
much of the browser window will be filled with the page. Enter the minimum
allowable width of the variable page in pixels in the Minimum field.
To reposition the page width reference guide for an individual page, display
the page that contains the guide you want to reposition, then choose Page &
Page Properties. Edit the values in the Layout area of the Page Properties
dialog box, and then click OK.
To reposition the page width reference guide for all pages based on the
same master page, display the master page that contains the guide you want
to reposition, then choose Page & Master Page Properties. Edit the values
in the Layout area of the Master Page Properties dialog box to reposition
the page width guide on the master page and on all document pages based
on that master page.

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Using Rulers and Guides

SPECIFYING THE RULER ORIGIN

The ruler origin is the location where the top ruler and the left ruler intersect;
it is the 0 point on both the left and top rulers. To move the ruler origin, click
where the rulers intersect in the ruler origin area in the upper left corner of the
document window and drag the intersection point to the location you want.
The ruler origin will be positioned where you release the mouse button. To
reset the ruler origin, click the ruler origin area.
∫

If Page is chosen for Item Coordinates in the Measurements pane of the
Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences), you can position
the ruler origin on a document page. If Spread is chosen, you can position the
ruler origin anywhere on a spread. P
S P E C I F Y I N G I T E M C O O R D I N AT E S F O R T H E R U L E R P

The Item Coordinates option in the Measurements pane of the Preferences
dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences) lets you specify whether the
top ruler continues across multiple pages in a spread or repeats from 0 for each
page. Choose Spread to display a single, continuous ruler across the top of
pages in a spread. Choose Page to repeat the horizontal ruler from 0 for
each page in the spread.
POSITIONING RULER GUIDES

You create ruler guides by dragging them off the horizontal and vertical rulers
(View & Show Rulers). You can create ruler guides on master pages and on
individual document pages.
• To pull out horizontal ruler guides, click on the top ruler; when the g pointer
displays, drag the ruler guide into position on the page. To pull out a vertical
ruler guide, click on the left ruler and drag the ruler guide onto the page when
the G pointer displays. If the Measurements palette is open when you drag a
ruler guide, the guide’s position is indicated in the X field (for vertical ruler
guides) or the Y field (for horizontal ruler guides).
• If, as you drag out a horizontal ruler guide, you release the mouse button when
the ruler guide is positioned over the pasteboard, the ruler guide will extend
across the pasteboard and all the pages in the spread. If you release the mouse
button when the horizontal ruler guide is positioned over a document page,
the ruler guide will display only on that page.
• To reposition a ruler guide, click it, then drag it to a different location when
either the g or the G pointer displays. You must have the Item tool e selected
to click and drag a guide when the pointer is over an item and you have chosen
In Front from the Guides area in the General pane of the Preferences dialog
box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences). To click a guide when the pointer
is over an item and the Content tool E is selected, press C (Mac OS) or
Ctrl (Windows) while you click and drag the ruler guide.

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• To remove a ruler guide, click it, then drag it off the page. To remove all ruler
guides from a spread’s pasteboard, scroll through the document so that a portion
of the pasteboard is displayed; press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) while
you click an area of the ruler that is adjacent to the pasteboard. To remove all
ruler guides from a document page, scroll through the document so that a
portion of the page is displayed; press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows)
while you click an area of the ruler that is adjacent to the document page.
Click the horizontal ruler to delete horizontal ruler guides; click the vertical
ruler to delete vertical ruler guides.

å

To create a guide that only displays at or above the current view percentage,
press Shift while you create the guide. For example, if you press Shift and create
a guide while the document is in 400% view, that guide will display only at
views between 400% and 800% (Mac OS) or 400% and Maximum (Windows).

SPECIFYING GREEKING
In QuarkXPress, “greeking” is the process of replacing text and pictures with gray bars
and boxes to improve screen redraw speed. Greeking can also help you concentrate
on the layout without being distracted by specific words and images.
GREEKING TEXT

When text is greeked, lines of text are replaced with gray bars. To specify
greeking, choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences and click the General
pane. Check Greek Text Below and enter a value from 2 to 720 points in the
field (characters below that point size will be greeked). Text greeking does not
affect the way characters print.
GREEKING PICTURES

When pictures are greeked, imported pictures are replaced with a gray pattern.
To specify greeking, choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences and click the
General pane. Check Greek Pictures. Greeking does not affect the way pictures
print. When Greek Pictures is checked, you can view a picture by selecting its
picture box.

Greeked pictures display as gray boxes; greeked text displays as gray bars.

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Creating New Print Documents

Chapter 3: Document Basics
Just as a house must be built on a foundation in order to be stable, any publication
requires a document as a foundation, and understanding the basics of a good
foundation is important.
QuarkXPress lets you create new documents from scratch, build documents based on
preconfigured templates, and work with previously saved documents. Documents can
be saved on a local hard drive, to a connected server, or to a removable media storage
device for transportation. Once you familiarize yourself with these basics, you’ll be
on your way to efficiently creating stable publications.

C R E AT I N G N E W P R I N T D O C U M E N T S P
You can create a new document at any time, as long as you have fewer than 25 files
open. When you create a new document, you can specify its page size and margin
positions, and you can choose whether the document will consist of single pages or
of spreads with left- and right-facing pages. You also have the option of creating
columns and text boxes on your document pages.
å

Parts of the user interface that are unique to print documents display only
when a print document is active. Parts of the user interface that are unique
to Web documents display only when a Web document is active.

1 Choose File & New & Document (C+N on Mac OS, Ctrl+N on Windows).

Choose File & New & Document to define page information and create a new document.

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2 To specify a standard page size, choose an option from the Size pop-up menu.
To create a custom-sized page, enter dimensions in the Width and Height fields.
å

When specifying values in a dialog box, use the Tab key to move from the active
field to the next field, or press Shift+Tab to move to the previous field.

3 Choose either portrait or landscape page orientation by clicking an Orientation
icon (Mac OS) or radio button (Windows).

4 To specify the position of the margin guides (nonprinting lines used to position
items on a page), enter values in the fields in the Margin Guides area.

5 Check Facing Pages to specify that the document contains both left-facing
and right-facing pages.

6 To specify the number of columns on document pages and the spacing
between them, enter values in the Columns and Gutter Width fields.

7 Check Automatic Text Box to place an automatic text box on the first page of
the document and on the default master page. Click OK.
∫

The size of the automatic text box is determined by the values entered in
the Margin Guides area. If more than one column has been specified in the
Columns field, the automatic text box will be divided into linked columns.
If you do not check Automatic Text Box, QuarkXPress still draws guides that
reflect the values in the Margin Guides and Columns areas.
QuarkXPress remembers the values you enter in the New Document dialog box,
and uses them as default values the next time you create a new document.

å

A master page is a nonprinting page used to automatically format other document pages. Every QuarkXPress document contains a master page by default.
The default master page formatting is based on settings in the New Document
dialog box.

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Creating New Web Documents

C R E AT I N G N E W W E B D O C U M E N T S W
You can create a new Web document at any time, as long as you have fewer than 25
files open. When you create a new Web document, you can specify its page width,
its background, and its default text and link colors. Each page in a Web document
can be exported as an HTML document.
å

Parts of the user interface that are unique to print documents display only
when a print document is active. Parts of the user interface that are unique
to Web documents display only when a Web document is active.
C R E AT I N G A N E W W E B D O C U M E N T W

To create a new Web document:

1 Choose File & New & Web Document (C+Option+Shift+N on Mac OS,
Ctrl+Alt+Shift+N on Windows).

Choose File & New & Web Document to create a new Web document.

2 To specify default colors for text, the page background, hyperlinks, visited
hyperlinks, and active hyperlinks, choose options from the pop-up menus
in the Colors area. You can choose an existing color or choose Other and
then select a new color.

3 To specify the position of the page width guide, choose an option from the
Page Width pop-up menu or enter a value in the Page Width field.

4 To make the page a variable-width page, check Variable Width Page and
then enter a percentage in the Width field and a minimum page width in
the Minimum field.

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å

In a variable-width page, the objects on the page will “stretch” when the end
user widens or narrows the browser window, as long as the width of the browser
window is greater than the value in the Minimum field.

5 To specify a background picture for the page, check Background Image, then
click Select (Mac OS) or Browse (Windows) and locate the picture file. Finally,
choose an option from the Repeat pop-up menu:
• Choose Tile to continuously repeat the picture both horizontally and vertically.
• Choose Horizontally to continuously repeat the picture horizontally but
not vertically.
• Choose Vertically to continuously repeat the picture vertically but
not horizontally.
• Choose None to show the picture only once, in the upper left corner of
the browser window.

6 Click OK.
SETTING UP A NEW WEB DOCUMENT W

Once you’ve created a new Web document, take a moment to set its preferences.
To set preferences for the active Web document:

1 Choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences. The Preferences dialog
box displays.

2 Click General to display the General pane.

Use the General pane of the Preferences dialog box to set preferences for the active
Web document.

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3 Enter a name in the Image Export Directory field. When you export the Web
document as HTML, image files will be placed in a folder with this name. (If the
folder does not yet exist, it will be created.)

4 Enter a file path or folder name in the Site Root Directory field or click Select
(Mac OS) or Browse (Windows) and navigate to the folder you want. When you
export the Web document as HTML, this is where the exported files and images
(see Step 3) will be placed.

5 Click OK.

OPENING DOCUMENTS
QuarkXPress lets you open any combination of 25 documents, templates, or libraries
at one time. You can open documents, libraries, and templates created in QuarkXPress
version 3.1 or later.
To open a file:

1 Choose File & Open (C+O on Mac OS, Ctrl+O on Windows).

Use the Open dialog box (File menu) to locate and open QuarkXPress documents.

2 Use the controls in the dialog box to locate the document you want to open;
then select the document in the list.

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Opening Documents

3 Mac OS only: Check Preview to display a thumbnail (reduced representation)
of the first page of the selected document.

4 Click Open.
å

When you open a document from a previous version of QuarkXPress, the
program uses the text flow from the older version to prevent text reflow. You
can update text flow to the current version by pressing Option (Mac OS) or
Alt (Windows) when you click Open in the Open dialog box. This way, you
can update the document to take advantage of improvements in text flow in
later versions of QuarkXPress. You cannot update text flow by double-clicking
a document icon to open it. (Updating text flow may cause reflow and change
your design or layout.)

∫

If the Missing Fonts alert displays when you open a document, you can click
Continue and QuarkXPress will automatically replace the fonts with a system
font. You can also click List Fonts to display a list of the missing fonts, and
have the opportunity to permanently replace them.
If the Nonmatching Preferences dialog box displays when you open a
document, click Keep Document Settings to use the settings saved with the
documents. Click Use XPress Preferences to update the document so that
it uses the “XPress Preferences” file on your computer; there is a chance of
reflow with the new settings. For information about working with preferences,
see “Understanding Nonmatching Preferences” in Chapter 1,
“Customizing QuarkXPress.”

SAVING DOCUMENTS
The Save command records changes to your documents each time you choose File &
Save (C+S on Mac OS, Ctrl+S on Windows). When you choose Revert to Saved
(File menu), QuarkXPress discards the changes made since the last time you saved.
The Save as command lets you name and save a new document or create a copy of
an existing document.
To use the Save as feature:

1 Choose File & Save as (C+Option+S on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+S on Windows).

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Use the Save as dialog box to save new documents and to save active documents under a
new name without replacing the original document file.

2 Use the controls in the dialog box to specify a location for the new
document file.

3 On Mac OS, enter a name for the document in the Save current document as
field. On Windows, enter a name for the document in the File name field.

On Mac OS, use the Save current document as field to enter a name for the new document
file. On Windows, use the File name field to enter a name for the new document file.

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Saving Documents

4 On Mac OS, choose Document P(if you are working in a print document)
or Web Document W(if you are working in a Web document) from the Type
pop-up menu. On Windows, choose Documents (*.qxd) P(if you are working
in a print document) or Web Document (*.qwd) W(if you are working in a
Web document) from the Save as type pop-up menu.

5 Choose a QuarkXPress file format version from the Version pop-up menu.
6 Mac OS only: Check Include Preview to create a thumbnail preview of the
document for display in the Open dialog box.

7 Click Save.
∫

QuarkXPress can open documents saved in version 3.1 or later. Earlier versions
of QuarkXPress are unable to open documents saved in the current version of
QuarkXPress. Items based on features exclusive to the current version will be
stripped from documents saved in older formats.

å

If you are planning to create other documents with the same specifications
(master pages, style sheets, etc.) as the current document, you might want to
save a stripped down version of the document as a template. To create templates, see “Saving Documents as Templates” later in this chapter.
If you make changes to your document but then decide you don’t want to
keep them, choosing File & Revert to Saved will open the last saved version
of the document.

S A V I N G D O C U M E N T S A U T O M AT I C A L LY
The Auto Save feature protects your work from power and system failures. When the
Auto Save feature is on, QuarkXPress automatically records changes made to all
documents and saves them to your document folder. Automatic saves are performed
at specific intervals (during idle time if possible). QuarkXPress does not overwrite
the original files until you choose File & Save.
U S I N G T H E A U T O S AV E F E AT U R E

1 Choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences and click Save in the list on the
left to display the Save pane.

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Saving Documents Automatically

2 Check Auto Save.

Use the Auto Save feature to protect your work from power and system failures.

3 Enter an interval in the minutes field. Click OK. Automatic saves will be
performed (during idle time, if possible) at the specified interval.
∫

The Auto Save feature only works with saved documents. If you have an
unnamed document that was never saved, it is not backed up by Auto Save.

å

The Revert to Saved command (File menu) reverts to the last manually saved
version of a document regardless of your Auto Save setting. If you want to
revert to the last auto-saved version of a document, press Option (Mac OS)
or Alt (Windows) while you choose File & Revert to Saved.

R E C O V E R I N G A N A U T O - S AV E D D O C U M E N T

To recover an auto-saved document after a system or power failure, choose
File & Open and locate the document. Two files will display in the dialog box.
On Mac OS, the original document will be saved and the auto-saved version will
be saved with “Auto Save” appended to the file name. On Windows, the original
document will be saved with the “.qxd” or “.qwd” extension and the auto-saved
version will be saved with the “.asv” extension.

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Saving Documents Automatically

Open the original document; it will be combined with the auto-saved version
as it is opened. When you open the document, an alert will display. Click OK
to continue.

The Auto Save alert lets you know that you are opening an auto-saved version of a document.

The auto-saved document retains changes made until the most recent automatic
save occurred. Depending on your auto-save interval, you may have lost a few
minutes of work. At this point, you can save the document with its auto-saved
changes (File & Save), or you can reject the auto-saved changes and return to
the last manually saved version of the document (File & Revert to Saved).
å

It is a good idea to use either the Auto Save or Auto Backup feature. However,
you should not use both features together, as this may cause a significant
increase in the amount of time it takes to save the document.

SAVING REVISIONS OF DOCUMENTS
The Auto Backup feature lets you save up to 100 revisions of a QuarkXPress document. When Auto Backup is on, choosing File & Save sends the previous version
of the active document to a folder that you specify (or the default document folder).
A number between 1 and 100 is added to the name of the original file for each new
backup; the most recent backup has the highest number. When the number of backup
files exceeds the number of revisions you specify, the oldest revision is deleted. Revisions
may be retrieved from the specified folder or the default document folder.
USING AUTO BACKUP

1 Choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences and click Save in the list on the
left to display the Save pane.

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2 Check Auto Backup.

Use the Auto Backup feature to save up to 100 revisions of a document.

3 In the Keep revisions field, enter the number of document revisions you
want to retain.

4 In the Destination area, click the Document Folder button to save revisions in
the folder that contains the original file. To choose a different folder on Mac OS,
click the Other Folder button, then click Select to display the Backup Folder
dialog box. To choose a different folder on Windows, click the Other Folder
button; then click Browse to display the Browse for Folder dialog box.

5 Use the controls in the dialog box to select a folder in which to store revisions.
Click the New button to create and name a new destination folder.

6 Click Select (Mac OS) or OK (Windows) to designate the selected or new folder
as the backup folder and return to the Preferences dialog box; then click OK.
å

Revisions created by using the Auto Backup feature have a revision number
appended to the document name. Because revisions are stored by default in the
same folder as the document, and the auto backup files have similar names,
locating the original document can be confusing. To prevent this confusion,
you can choose a different folder to save revisions to when you enable the
Auto Backup feature.

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Saving Revisions of Documents

∫

Each backup revision of a document you keep is a full copy of the document
in a specific state. Specifying a large number of revisions may consume hard
disk space rapidly.

RECOVERING AN AUTO BACKUP DOCUMENT

To recover an auto backup document, choose File & Open to locate and open
the file in the revisions folder. To avoid confusing the recovered file with the
original file, rename the recovered file as soon as you open it.

S A V I N G D O C U M E N T S A S T E M P L AT E S
A template is a preformatted document that is protected from overwriting. You can create
templates for any publications that will use the same format repeatedly. Templates usually include style sheets, colors, hyphenation and justification specifications, master
pages, and any other items that will be used in all documents based on that template.
S AV I N G A D O C U M E N T A S A T E M P L AT E

You can save any open document as a template using the Save as command
(File menu).

1 Choose File & Save as (C+Option+S on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+S on Windows).

Use the Save as dialog box to save a document as a template

2 Enter a name for the template in the Save current document as field (Mac OS)
or File name field (Windows).

3 On Mac OS, choose Templates P(if you are working in a print document)
or Web Template W(if you are working in a Web document) from the

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Type pop-up menu. The Include Preview check box will be checked automatically. On Windows, choose Templates (*.qxt) P(if you are working in a
print document) or Web Template (*.qwt) W(if you are working in a Web
document) from the Save as type pop-up menu. Then click Save.
å

To create a document based on a template, choose File & Open and choose the
template. Then save your file as a document.
Mac OS only: When you are saving a template in Mac OS, Include Preview is
checked by default so you can identify the template visually.

M O D I F Y I N G T E M P L AT E S

You can modify a template by saving it again with the Save as command
(File menu).

1 Open an existing template.
2 Choose File & Save as (C+Option+S on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+S on Windows).
3 On Mac OS, choose Template Por Web Template Wfrom the Type pop-up
menu. On Windows, choose Templates (*.qxt) Por Web Templates (*.qwt) W
from the Save as type pop-up menu.

4 Enter the same name as the existing template in the Save current document as
field (Mac OS) or File name field (Windows).

5 Choose the same location in which to save the template.
6 Click Save. An alert displays; click Replace (Mac OS) or Yes (Windows) to
confirm that you want to replace the existing file.

Save changes to templates by saving the changed template with the same name as the
previous document, and click Replace (Mac OS) or Yes (Windows) to replace the file.

å

When you open a template, QuarkXPress always creates a new copy of the document. The default name is “Document” with a number appended to it according
to the number of new documents you have opened (for example, “Document 1”
or “WebDocument1” on Mac OS or “Document1.qxd” or “Document1.qwd” on
Windows). You do not have to worry about overwriting the original template.
Even if you open a template over a network, a new copy is temporarily saved
to your hard drive.

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Creating Boxes

Chapter 4: Box Basics
To create a successful page layout, you need an orderly way to arrange text and
pictures — you need boxes. Boxes are items that can contain text or pictures; they can
even be created to contain no content at all. Box boundaries give text and pictures a
specific shape, size, and placement on a page. Boxes are also vital in Web documents;
by using box tools to create Web documents, QuarkXPress frees you from the tedium of
manually writing HTML.
Once a box is on a page, QuarkXPress allows you to perform a variety of manipulations, from simple operations such as resizing and rotating boxes to advanced
operations using the Bézier tools and the Merge and Split features. This wide
array of choices lets you create boxes for the perfect layout.

C R E AT I N G B O X E S
QuarkXPress uses three different types of boxes: text boxes, picture boxes, and contentless boxes (boxes with a content of None). You can enter and import text into active
text boxes, and import or paste pictures into active picture boxes. Either type of box
can contain color, shades, blends, and frames.

Create boxes using the box tools, including the pop-out tools, in the Tools palette.

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Creating Boxes

C R E AT I N G B O X E S

Select a box tool from the Tools palette and move the Crosshair pointer c to
any position on the page. Then click and drag, or click and create points, to
draw the box. You create boxes using the following tools:
• The Rectangle Box tools T p create rectangular and square boxes
• The Rounded-corner Box tools Å x create boxes with rounded-corners
• The Concave-corner Box tools ı å create boxes with concave-corners
• The Beveled-corner Box tools Ç ∫ create boxes with beveled-corners
• The Oval Box tools Î O create oval and circular boxes

Use the pop-out box tools to create rectangle, rounded-corner, concave-corner, beveledcorner, and oval boxes.

• The Bézier Box tools ´ ∂ create boxes with both curved and straight
line segments
• The Freehand Box tools Ô ƒ create freehand boxes with curved line segments

Use the Bézier and freehand box tools to create shapes like these.

å

To constrain rectangular, rounded-corner, concave-corner, and beveled-corner
boxes to shapes with equal lengths on all sides, select the appropriate box tool
and press Shift while you drag.
To constrain an oval box to a circle, select either of the oval box tools Î O and
press Shift while you drag.
After you have selected a box tool and drawn a box, QuarkXPress automatically
selects either the Item tool e or the Content tool E. If you want to create
multiple boxes using the same tool, press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows)
when selecting a box tool to keep it selected.

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C R E AT I N G B É Z I E R B O X E S

The Bézier box tools, which are available for either text ´ or picture ∂ boxes,
let you draw multisided Bézier boxes that can have both straight and curved line
segments. The freehand box tools Ô ƒ let you use the mouse to draw shapes.
The design potential is limitless.

Create unusual boxes with both straight and curved line segments using a Bézier box
tool (left). Use a freehand box tool to create boxes that have a fluid, drawing-pad look (right).

The Bézier Box tools ´ ∂ create boxes with both curved and straight line
segments. To draw a Bézier box:

1 Select one of the Bézier box tools from the Tools palette. Move the Crosshair
pointer c to any position on the page and click to establish the first point.

˝
Click to establish the first point of a Bézier box.

2 To make a straight line segment, click wherever you want the next point
positioned. Do not click and drag the mouse.

Create a straight line segment by clicking once to establish the first point; then click at another
position to establish the second point.

3 To make a curved line segment, click and drag wherever you want the next
point positioned. A point with two curve handles will display. You can control
the curve’s size and shape by dragging a curve handle.

Create a curved line segment by clicking, or clicking and dragging to establish the first point;
then click and drag at another position to establish the next point, and a curved line segment.

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Creating Boxes

4 Continue creating points by clicking, or clicking and dragging.
5 Close the box using one of three methods: You can double-click any time after
creating the second point; move the Crosshair pointer c on top of the first
point to display the Close Box pointer V and click; or select another tool in the
Tools palette.
å

A point connects line segments and defines where line segments start and end.
Points attached to curved line segments have curve handles that you can use to
reshape the curves.
Curve handles extend from either side of a point and control a curve’s shape.

Close a Bézier box by positioning the Crosshair pointer c on top of the first point. Click when
the Close Box pointer V displays.

∫

To constrain a point (in relation to the previously created point) to 45° angles,
press Shift while clicking. To constrain a curve handle to 45° angles, press Shift
anytime while dragging the curve handle.
The freehand box tools Ô ƒ create freehand boxes with curved line segments.
To draw a freehand box:
Select one of the freehand box tools from the Tools palette. Move the Crosshair
pointer c to any position on the page; then click and drag in a continuous
motion until you have drawn a freehand shape. Either close the shape manually
by connecting the Bézier line to its starting point, or release the mouse button
and QuarkXPress will automatically close the shape.

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Creating Boxes

Create a freehand box by clicking and dragging in a continuous motion. This box, shown
during creation (left), after completion (center), and with an imported picture (right), was
created with the freehand picture box tool ƒ.

RESIZING BOXES
You can resize any box by modifying the size of its bounding box. A bounding box is a
nonprinting, rectangular box that encloses every box. The resizing handles demarcate
the bounding box; you can see it most clearly when Item & Edit & Shape is unchecked
for a nonrectangular box shape. You can use the Resizing pointer f to manually resize
boxes, or you can enter precise values in the width and height fields of either the Modify
dialog box (Item menu) or the Measurements palette. You can resize active boxes using
any of the three following methods:
• The Tools palette: Select the Item tool e or the Content tool E and
move the Arrow pointer a over a selected box’s resizing handle to display
the Resizing pointer f; click and drag the handle to a new location to
reduce or enlarge the box.

Resize a circular picture box by enlarging its bounding box.

å

Bounding boxes have eight resizing handles.
To scale box contents as you resize, press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while
dragging a resizing handle. The contents will also stretch, condense, enlarge,
or shrink, depending on how you resize the box.
To resize boxes proportionally, press Option+Shift (Mac OS) or Shift (Windows)
while dragging a resizing handle. Press C+Option+Shift (Mac OS) or
Ctrl+Alt+Shift (Windows) to resize a box and scale the contents proportionally.

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• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows); then click the Box tab. Enter values in the Width and Height
fields to precisely change the size of a box; then click OK.

Using the Width and Height fields in the Box tab of the Modify dialog box (Item menu), you
can enter numerical values to precisely resize a box.

• The Measurements palette: Enter values in the W and H fields to change the
width and height, then press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows).

Resize a box using the Measurements palette by entering width and height values in
the W and H fields.

å

When the Item tool e is selected, double-click a box to quickly display the
Modify dialog box.
You can quickly display the Measurements palette by pressing C+Option+M
(Mac OS) or Ctrl+Alt+M (Windows), or by pressing F9.

RESHAPING BOXES
You can reshape any box by using the shape options in the Shape submenu (Item
menu). You can reshape any rectangular, rounded-corner, concave-corner, or beveledcorner box by manipulating the corner radius. You can also reshape Bézier boxes by
repositioning points, curve handles, and line segments. QuarkXPress points, curve
handles, and line segments are described in detail later in this section.
RESHAPING BOXES USING THE SHAPE SUBMENU

The Shape submenu (Item menu) contains six box shapes and three line
shapes that you can apply to boxes. To change the shape of a selected box,
choose Item & Shape to display the submenu; then choose a shape from
the submenu. The selected box is reshaped automatically.

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Change the shape of an active box by choosing from options in the Shape submenu
(Item menu).

å

If you convert a text box containing text into a line, it will become a text
path. If you convert a picture box containing a picture into a line, you will
lose the contents.

RESHAPING BOXES USING THE CORNER RADIUS FIELD

The Corner Radius field lets you specify the roundness of corners on any rectangular, rounded-corner, concave-corner, or beveled-corner box. You can alter
the corner radius of a selected box using:
• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows); then click the Box tab. Enter a value in the Corner Radius field
to specify the radius of the arcs that form the corners of a box.

Manipulate boxes using the Corner Radius field (Item & Modify & Box tab). The left text box
has a Corner Radius of 0", the center text box has a Corner Radius of .25", and the right text
box has a Corner Radius of 2".

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• The Measurements palette: (picture boxes only) To specify a corner radius
for a picture box, enter a value in the = field, then press Return (Mac OS)
or Enter (Windows).

Specify the roundness of a corner for any rectangular, rounded-corner, concave-corner, or
beveled-corner picture box using the = field in the Measurements palette

∫

You cannot specify a corner radius for oval, freehand, or Bézier boxes.
In a Web document, you cannot edit the corner radius for a text box unless you
check Convert to Graphic on Export in the Modify dialog box (Item &
Modify & Box tab). W
RESHAPING BÉZIER BOXES

QuarkXPress lets you reshape Bézier boxes by manipulating points, curve
handles, and line segments. The definitions on this page introduce key Bézier
concepts, and are followed by instructions on reshaping.
DEFINITIONS

Point. A point connects line segments and defines where line segments start and
end. Points connecting curved line segments have curve handles that control
the shape of the curves. QuarkXPress offers three types of points: corner,
smooth, and symmetrical.
Corner point. A corner point connects two straight lines, a straight line and a
curved line, or two noncontinuous curved lines. With curved lines, the corner
point’s curve handles can be manipulated independently, usually to form a
sharp transition between the two segments.

Corner points

Smooth point: A smooth point connects two curved lines to form a continuous
curve. The curve handles always rest on a straight line through the point, but
they can be distanced independently.

Smooth point

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Symmetrical point: A symmetrical point connects two curved lines to form a
continuous curve. The result is similar to a smooth point, but the curve handles
always rest on a straight line through the point and are always equidistant from
the point.

Symmetrical point

Curve handles: Curve handles extend from either side of a point and control
a curve’s shape.

Curve handles

Line segments: Line segments are straight or curved line sections positioned
between two points.

Line segments

When Shape (Item & Edit) is checked and the Arrow pointer a is positioned
over an active Bézier box, various pointers display indicating whether you can
select a point ˝, the curve handles Ï Ó, or a line segment ˆ. Click and drag
using the pointers to reshape the Bézier box.
You can also manipulate Bézier boxes using the pointers together with options
in the Item menu and Measurements palette, by using keyboard commands
and modifier keys, or by adding and deleting points.

Reshape Bézier boxes by manipulating points, curve handles, and line segments. This Bézier
box, created with the Bézier Picture Box tool ∂, displays a point between its two curve
handles. The curve handles are visible only when a point is active.

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∫

A bounding box may display immediately after you draw a Bézier box, depending on whether the Shape option is checked. Checking Shape (Item & Edit &
Shape) gives you access to the points, curve handles, and line segments within
the bounding box. If Shape is unchecked, you can quickly access a Bézier box’s
shape by pressing Shift+F4 (Mac OS) or F10 (Windows).
• Reshaping Bézier boxes with pointers:

˝
The Point pointer ˝ lets you manipulate corner, smooth, and symmetrical points. To reposition
a point, click and drag.

Ï

Ó

The Curve Handle pointers Ï Ó let you manipulate both curve handles. Click a point when
the Point pointer ˝ displays. If the point has accessible curve handles, the curve handles will
display. To manipulate the shape of a curve, click and drag a curve handle.

ˆ
The Line Segment pointer ˆ lets you manipulate both straight and curved line segments.
To manipulate the shape and position of a line segment, click and drag.

Use a Curve Handle pointer Ó to reshape a curve.

å

To make a sharp corner from a round curve, select a point on the curve and
Option+click (Mac OS) or Alt+click (Windows) one of the curve handles. To
access the retracted curve handle, move the Arrow pointer a over the point.
When a Curve Handle pointer displays, click and drag the curve handle so
that it is again visible.

Option+click (Mac OS) or Alt+click (Windows) a smooth curve handle to retract the handle and
create a corner.

å

You can reshape a Bézier box while you are drawing it by pressing C (Mac OS)
or Ctrl (Windows) while repositioning the points, curve handles, or line
segments; and then resume box creation.

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• Reshaping Bézier boxes with the Item menu:
Points: Select a point; choose Item &Point/Segment Type to display the submenu; then check either Corner Point, Smooth Point, or Symmetrical Point,
depending on how you want to manipulate the active point.
Line segments: Select a line segment; choose Item & Point/Segment Type to
display the submenu; then check either Straight Segment or Curved Segment
to make the line segment straight or curved.

Use the Point/Segment Type submenu (Item menu) to choose either a Corner Point,
Smooth Point, or Symmetrical Point.

Use the Point/Segment Type submenu (Item menu) to convert a straight line segment into
a curved line segment (as shown), or vice versa.

∫

Changing a straight line segment to a curved line segment will make the curve
handles accessible.

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å

The type of point or line segment will automatically determine the type of curve
handles available for manipulation. You cannot directly manipulate the curve
handles through the Item menu, but you can indirectly affect them depending
on the type of point and line segment that you choose. For example, if you
initially created two corner points (and thus a straight line segment), you cannot access curve handles. However, if you select the line segment and choose
Curved Segment from the Point/Segment Type submenu (Item menu), or
click the curved line segment ∑ in the Measurements palette, the act of
converting the line segment will make the curve handles accessible.
• Reshaping Bézier boxes with the Measurements palette:
Points: Select a point with the Point pointer ˝; then click either †, ¥, or ® to
convert the point to a symmetrical, smooth, or corner point. Enter values in
the XP and YP fields to reposition an active point.
Curve handles: Select a point with the Point pointer ˝; if the point displays
curve handles, enter values in the r fields to reposition the angle of either
curve handle, or enter values in the and fields to resize either curve
handle (enter zero to retract the curve handle).
Line segments: Select a line segment with the Line Segment pointer ˆ; then click
either œ or ∑ to convert the line segment to a straight or curved line segment.

Use the Measurements palette to convert point and line segment types.

• Reshaping Bézier boxes with keyboard commands:
CHANGE IN POINT
OR LINE SEGMENT

MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Corner point

Option+F1

Ctrl+F1

Smooth point

Option+F2

Ctrl+F2

Symmetrical point

Option+F3

Ctrl+F3

Straight line segment

Option+
Shift+F1

Ctrl+
Shift+F1

Curved line segment

Option+
Shift+F2

Ctrl+
Shift+F2

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• Reshaping Bézier boxes with modifier keys:

å

CHANGE IN POINT
OR CURVE HANDLES

MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Add point

Option+click
line segment

Alt+click
line segment

Delete point

Option+
click point

Alt+
click point

Smooth to corner
point (vice versa)

Control+drag
curve handle

Ctrl+Shift+
drag curve handle

Snap point to 45° guides

Shift+
drag point

Shift+
drag point

Snap curve handles
to 45° guides

Shift+drag
curve handle

Shift+drag
curve handle

Retract one curve handle

Option+click
curve handle

Alt+click
curve handle

Retract curve handles

Control+Shift+ Ctrl+Shift+
click point
click point

Expose curve handles

Control+ Shift+ Ctrl+Shift+
drag point
drag point

To edit points on a selected box, first use the Shape submenu (Item &
Shape & ®) to convert the box to a Bézier box. The box will retain its original
shape, but it will be converted into an editable Bézier box. If you select a Bézier
box with an irregular shape and choose another shape from the Shape submenu, the new box or line will approximate the size of the Bézier shape’s
bounding box.
When Bézier items are selected, their editing lines, points, and curve handles
display in the color specified for Margin Guides. To change the color, choose
Edit & Preferences & Preferences and click the Display item in the list on
the left. Click the Margin color box to access the color wheel and change the
color. The color change will affect the margin guides and Bézier editing paths
for all documents.

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ADDING AND DELETING POINTS

To add a point, move the pointer over a line segment. When the Line Segment
pointer ˆ displays, Option+click (Mac OS) or Alt+click (Windows) to create
a new point. To delete a point, move the pointer over the point you want to
delete. When the Point pointer ˝ displays, Option+click (Mac OS) or Alt+click
(Windows) to delete the point.

Add and delete points to alter picture boxes, like the ones shown above. The car on the left
is the original. Several points were deleted and repositioned to make the car into a pickup
truck (center). Several points were added and repositioned to make the car into a covered
truck (right).

MOVING BOXES
You can move boxes within the same page, across page boundaries, or onto the pasteboard. You can also drag boxes to other open QuarkXPress documents or libraries. It’s
advisable to move small boxes with Item & Edit & Shape unchecked so their shape
will not be accidentally altered. You can use the Measurements palette to view box
position coordinates as you move boxes.
MOVING BOXES

You can move selected boxes by dragging them with the Item tool e, or you can
enter precise values in the Modify dialog box (Item & Modify & Box tab) or the
Measurements palette. You can move active boxes using:
• The Tools palette: With the Item tool e selected, drag a box to a new location.

Move boxes using the Item tool e.

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å

Select a box with the Item tool e and press the mouse button until the resize
handles disappear; then start dragging. If Delayed Item Dragging (Edit &
Preferences & Preferences & Interactive pane) is set to Show Contents, the
item and items in front of or behind it will appear semitransparent as you drag;
this can help you position the item more accurately. If Delayed Item Dragging
is set to Live Refresh, the item will appear normally (opaque), and any
runaround changes caused by repositioning the item will display immediately.
To rotate a box, use the Rotation tool R, the item rotation field r in the
Measurements palette, or the Angle field in the Modify dialog box (Item
menu). To skew a box, enter a value in the Skew field of the Modify dialog
box (Item menu). For information about rotating and skewing items, see
“Rotating and Skewing Items” in Chapter 6, “Manipulating Items.”
• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows); then click the Box tab. To move a box horizontally, enter a value in
the Origin Across field. To move a box vertically, enter a value in the Origin
Down field. Click OK.

Enter values in the Origin Across and Origin Down fields (Item & Modify & Box tab)
to move a box.

å

The Origin Across value is the position of the upper left corner of the bounding
box relative to the zero point on the horizontal ruler. The Origin Down value
is the position of the upper left corner of the bounding box relative to the zero
point on the vertical ruler.

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• The Measurements palette: To move a box horizontally, enter a value in the
X field. To move a box vertically, enter a value in the Y field, and press Return
(Mac OS) or Enter (Windows).

Move boxes by entering values in the X and Y coordinate fields of the Measurements palette.

ç

å

KEYBOARD COMMANDS
A U T O M AT I C

MAC OS

WINDOWS

M O V I N G F E AT U R E S

COMMAND

COMMAND

Nudge boxes in
1-point increments P

arrow keys

arrow keys

Nudge boxes in
.1-point increments P

Option+
arrow keys

Alt+
arrow keys

Nudge boxes in
1-pixel increments W

arrow keys

arrow keys

If the Content tool E is selected when using the arrow keys, the box contents
will move (instead of the box).
To move a box to another open QuarkXPress document, either select the box
with the Item tool e and drag it into another document, or copy and paste it.
You can snap a Bézier box to a guide according to a particular point you drag,
without reshaping the item. First, double-click a point to activate all the points
(and curve handles) on the Bézier box; then drag any point to the guide. (If the
box contains multiple, untouching shapes, triple-click to select all the points.)

FRAMING BOXES
QuarkXPress frames are decorative borders that can be placed around text or picture
boxes of any shape. Choose from predefined styles, or create new mathematically
defined frames using the Edit & Dashes & Stripes feature.
FRAMING BOXES

You can apply a frame to a selected box using the Frame tab (Item menu).
To apply a frame to a selected box:

1 Choose Item & Frame (C+B on Mac OS, Ctrl+B on Windows).

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Choose Item & Frame; or choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on Windows),
then click the Frame tab.

2 Enter a value in the Width field or choose a width from the pop-up menu.
3 Choose a frame style from the Style pop-up menu.
4 In the Frame area, choose a color from the Color pop-up menu; choose a shade
from the Shade pop-up menu.

5 If you have chosen a frame style with multiple stripes or dashes, you can choose
a Gap color from the Color pop-up menu; choose a Gap shade from the Shade
pop-up menu, then click OK.

Selecting a color and shade from the Gap area (Item & Frame) will color and shade the space
between a frame’s multiple stripes or dashes.

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∫

For HTML text boxes, only the Solid and the Solid 3-D frames are available.
However, all frames are available for a raster box. To convert an HTML text
box to a raster box, choose Item & Modify and check Convert to Graphic
on Export. W

å

The Style list (Item & Frame) displays frames provided with QuarkXPress as
well as frames created using the Dashes & Stripes dialog box (Edit menu).
To color a frame using the Colors palette, choose View & Show Colors, or
press F12. Click the frame icon J and choose one of the listed colors. To shade
a frame, click the pop-up menu next to the shade field and choose a percentage
from the list, or enter a new value in the shade field.

C R E AT I N G C U S T O M F R A M E S T Y L E S

You can create custom frame styles and apply them to text and picture boxes of
any shape. When you create a frame style with a document open, it is added to
the document’s style list. When you create a frame style when no documents are
open, it is added to the application’s style list. You can access and apply your
frame style through the Frame tab (Item menu). You can create two types of
styles: dashes (dotted or broken-line patterns) and stripes (lined patterns).
å

Any dash or stripe pattern you create can be applied to lines.
You can edit any dash or stripe style in the Dashes & Stripes dialog box (Edit
menu) by selecting it in the list and choosing Edit. The Edit dialog box is the
same dialog box that you see when you create a custom dash or stripe.
CREATING CUSTOM DASHED FRAME STYLES

1 Choose Edit & Dashes & Stripes.
2 Click the New button to display the pop-up menu, then choose Dash.

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Choose Edit & Dashes & Stripes to access the New pop-up menu. Choose Dash to create a
dash pattern.

3 Enter a dash name in the Name field.

Name a new dash by entering a name in the Name field (Edit & Dashes & Stripes &
New & Dash).

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4 Click anywhere in the ruler area. Every time you click, an arrow 3 is created. The
arrow indicates where a dash will start or stop. If you create several arrows,
and space them apart at different distances, you will create a dashed style that
has dashes of varying sizes. To make a dash longer or shorter, drag an arrow. To
delete a dash, drag its arrows off the ruler, or drag the dash segment up or down.

Click and place arrows to create dashes. Five arrows were placed to create this custom dash
style (Edit & Dashes & Stripes & New & Dash).

5 View the Preview area to see what your custom dash will look like. Drag the
slider to see the dash at different widths.

Drag the slider in the Preview area to view the pattern at different sizes (Edit &
Dashes & Stripes & New & Dash).

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6 Use the Dash Attributes area to:
• Determine whether the dash pattern is proportional to the width of the frame, or
whether it is absolute (not dependent on the width of the frame). Enter a number
in the Repeats Every field when times width is chosen in the pop-up menu to
create a proportional dash pattern. Enter a number in the Repeats Every field
when Points is chosen in the pop-up menu to create an absolute dash pattern
that uses points as the measuring system.

å

You can choose between a proportional and absolute dash pattern using the
Repeats Every pop-up menu menu (Edit & Dashes & Stripes & New & Dash).
Proportional segments (times width) change depending on the width of the
frame, while absolute segments (Points) remain the same width regardless of the
width of the frame.

Notice the difference between proportional (top) and absolute (bottom) in the Preview area
(Edit & Dashes & Stripes & New & Dash). Use the slider in the Preview area to see the
difference between the proportional and absolute patterns.

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• Choose an option from the Miter pop-up menu to indicate the corner type.
You can choose Sharp, Rounded, or Beveled.

Choose Sharp, Rounded, or Beveled in the Miter pop-up menu (left) (Edit &
Dashes & Stripes & New & Dash) to determine the corner type.

• Choose an option from the Endcap pop-up menu to determine dash shape. You
can choose from Square, Projecting Round, Projecting Square, or Round.

To apply a flush, rectangular end to your dash, choose Square from the Endcap pop-up menu
(Edit & Dashes & Stripes & New & Dash).

To apply an extended, rounded end to your dash, choose Projecting Round from the Endcap
pop-up menu (Edit & Dashes & Stripes & New & Dash).

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To apply an extended, rectangular end to your dash, choose Projecting Square from the
Endcap pop-up menu (Edit & Dashes & Stripes & New & Dash).

To apply a flush, rounded end to your dash, choose Round from the Endcap pop-up menu
(Edit & Dashes & Stripes & New & Dash).

• Check Stretch to Corners to make the dash pattern stretch evenly along a frame
so that the corner areas look symmetrical.

When Stretch to Corners is unchecked, the dash pattern is uneven at the corner areas (left).
Checking Stretch to Corners (Edit & Dashes & Stripes & New & Dash) makes the dash
pattern align evenly at all corner areas (right).

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7 Enter a value in the Position field to precisely position a new arrow. You can
also view the Position field for feedback in arrow placement. Click Add to add
an arrow.

8 Click OK to close the Edit Dash dialog box; then click Save to save your
custom dash.

9 Apply your new dash by using the Style pop-up menu in the Frame tab of the
Modify dialog box (Item & Frame).

Apply custom dashes using the Style pop-up menu in the Modify dialog box (Item & Frame).

å

When you choose an option from the Miter pop-up menu, and then apply the
dash or stripe pattern to a line, the mitering will affect corner areas on multiplesegment lines. If you apply the dash or stripe pattern to a frame, the mitering will
only affect the inside edges of the frame on a Bézier box. Otherwise, the Miter
setting has no effect on frames.
CREATING CUSTOM STRIPED FRAME STYLES

1 Choose Edit & Dashes & Stripes.
2 Click the New button to display the pop-up menu; then choose Stripe.

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Choose Edit & Dashes & Stripes to access the New pop-up menu. Choose Stripe to create
a pattern with a continuous stripe or series of continuous stripes.

3 Enter a stripe name in the Name field.
4 Click anywhere in the ruler area. Every time you click, an arrow 8 is created.
The arrow indicates where a stripe will start or stop. If you create several arrows,
and space them apart at different distances, you will create a multistriped style
that has stripes of varying sizes. To make a stripe larger or smaller, drag an arrow.
To delete a stripe, drag its arrows off the ruler or drag the stripe segment to the
left or right.

Click and place arrows to create stripes. Five arrows were placed to create this custom stripe
pattern (Edit & Dashes & Stripes & New & Stripe).

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5 View the Preview area to see what your custom stripe will look like. Drag the
slider to view the stripe at different widths.

Drag the slider in the Preview area to view the pattern at different sizes.

6 Choose an option from the Miter pop-up menu to indicate the corner type.
You can choose sharp corner, rounded corner, or beveled corner.

7 Enter a value in the Position field to precisely position a new arrow. You can
also view the Position field for feedback in arrow placement. Click Add to add
an arrow.

8 Click OK to close the Edit Stripe dialog box; then click Save to save your
custom stripe.

9 Apply your new stripe using the Style pop-up menu in the Frame tab of the
Modify dialog box (Item & Frame).
å

To compare two dashes or stripes, choose Edit & Dashes & Stripes. Shift+click
to select two consecutive items, or C+click (Mac OS) or Ctrl+click (Windows)
to select two nonconsecutive items. Press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) to
change the Append button to Compare. Click Compare to display a summary
of each component; the differences display in bold. You can also compare two
dashes or stripes in the Description field of the File & Append dialog box.

∫

Rulers display differently depending on whether a dash or a stripe is being
edited. If you’ve chosen to edit a dash, the ruler displays along the top. If you’ve
chosen to edit a stripe, the ruler displays along the side.

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COLORING BOXES
Once you have created a text or picture box, you can add a background color, shade, or
blends. You can apply colors, shades, and blends to an active box using:
• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows); then click the Box tab. Choose a color from the Color pop-up menu.
Choose a percentage from the Shade pop-up menu, or enter a value in the field.

Choose an option from the Color pop-up menu (Item & Modify) to color a box.

å

You can apply colors, shades, and blends to grouped or multiple-selected boxes
by selecting the boxes and choosing a color using either the Box tab of the
Modify dialog box (Item menu) or the Colors palette (View menu).
To determine a blend pattern, choose a style other than Solid from the Style
pop-up menu. Choose an angle from the Angle pop-up menu, or enter a value
in the field to specify the angle the at which the two colors will blend. Choose a
color from the Color pop-up menu to determine the second blend color. Choose
a percentage from the Shade pop-up menu, or enter a value in the field; then
click OK.

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Use the Style, Angle, Color, and Shade pop-up menus in the Blend area (Item & Modify &
Box tab) to specify a blend for a box background.

Use the Style pop-up menu in the Blend area (Item & Modify & Box tab) to choose
among the Linear Blend, Mid-Linear Blend, Rectangular Blend, Diamond Blend, Circular
Blend, and Full Circular Blend styles.

∫

To export a blend in a rectangular text box in a Web document, you must check
Convert to Graphic on Export in the Modify dialog box (Item & Modify &
Box tab). W
• The Colors palette: Choose View & Show Colors and click the background
icon Y. Click one of the listed colors, then choose a shade by clicking the popup menu arrow next to the current shade value and choosing a percentage from
the pop-up menu, or by entering a new value in the shade field.

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To create a blend, choose a blend style from the blend pop-up menu. Next,
click the #1 button and choose the first color. Click the #2 button and choose
the second color. Choose a shade for each color by clicking the pop-up menu
next to the current shade value and choosing a percentage from the pop-up
menu, or by entering a value in the shade field. Specify a blend angle by entering a value in the angle field.

Click the #2 button to choose a second blend color from the Colors palette (View menu).

∫

Box backgrounds behave differently depending on the contents and the type of
background. For example, if a text box is selected with the Content tool E,
only the first blend color displays. However, if a picture box contains a grayscale
TIFF, JPEG, or GIF, the background color will also color the picture’s background;
if that picture box contains a blend, the color will blend in the box’s background, but the background of the TIFF itself will be a solid color.

å

An item must be selected in the document to activate the Colors palette.
You can drag and drop colors from the Colors palette by clicking one of the
color swatches in the list and dragging the color swatch over the active box.
As soon as the color swatch is positioned over a box, the box will fill with the
new color. Drop the swatch to apply the color.

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MERGING AND SPLITTING BOXES
Options in the Merge and Split submenus (Item menu) let you create complex Bézier
boxes with many design capabilities. A box created with one of the Merge commands
combines multiple-selected boxes into one box shape with a single set of contents. The
Merge commands work with two or more boxes (or items) that overlap each other, and
in some cases, with nonoverlapping boxes (or items). The Split command either splits a
merged box into separate boxes, splits a complex box that contains paths within paths
into separate boxes, or splits a box that contains a border that crosses over itself (such
as a figure eight).

You can merge boxes (left) using the Union command (center) (Item & Merge & Union).
You can then import a picture into the merged box (right).

∫

Two or more items — boxes, lines, or text paths — need to be selected to apply
the Merge commands in the Item menu.
When working in a document that contains multiple layers, items must reside
on the same layer before they can be merged. For information about layers, see
Chapter 15, “Layers.”

MERGING BOXES

Multiple-select the boxes you want to merge with the Item tool e or the
Content tool E. Choose Item & Merge to display the submenu. Choose
options from the submenu to combine the selected boxes in various ways.
All these commands also apply to other multiple-selected items such as
lines and text paths (but text paths may lose their content).

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Use the Merge submenu (Item menu) to choose from six options that let you manipulate
multiple-selected boxes.

• The Intersection command retains any areas where items overlap the back item,
and removes the rest.

Applying the Intersection command (Item & Merge & Intersection) to stacked items retains
overlapping shapes, and deletes nonoverlapping shapes (right).

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• The Union command combines all the items into one box, retaining all
overlapped areas as well as nonoverlapped areas.

Applying the Union command (Item & Merge & Union) merges all overlapping items into
one box (right).

• The Difference command deletes the front items. Any overlapping areas will be
cut out.

Applying the Difference command (Item & Merge & Difference) to overlapping items retains
the back item, and deletes the front items.

• The Reverse Difference command deletes the back item. Any overlapping areas
will be cut out.

Applying the Reverse Difference command (Item & Merge & Reverse Difference) to
overlapping items retains the front items and deletes the back item. Any overlapping areas
are cut out.

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• The Exclusive Or command leaves all of the shapes intact but cuts out any areas
where there is overlap. If you want to edit the points surrounding the cut-out
area, you will notice that there are now two points at every location where two
lines originally crossed.

Use the Exclusive Or command (Item & Merge & Exclusive Or) to access and manipulate
points at any overlapping intersections.

• The Combine command is similar to the Exclusive Or command, but if you
look at the points surrounding the cut-out area, you will notice that no points
were added where two lines intersect.

Applying the Combine command (Item & Merge & Combine) to overlapping items keeps
all the shapes intact, but any overlapping areas are cut out (right).

å

When two or more kinds of boxes or items overlap and any of the Merge
commands are applied, the style and contents of the back item are kept.
The contents of all other items are lost.
If you want to undo a merge combination, choose Edit & Undo (C+Z on
Mac OS, Ctrl+Z on Windows).
Grouped items can be merged using the commands in the Merge submenu
(Item menu).

SPLITTING BOXES

You can use the Split commands to split merged boxes that contain nonoverlapping shapes, to split boxes that contain shapes within shapes, or to split boxes
that contain a border that crosses over itself (such as a figure eight). Select the
box you want to split with the Item tool e or the Content tool E and choose
Item & Split to display the submenu. You can split boxes using:

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• The Outside Paths command works with a merged box that contains several,
nonoverlapping shapes. Outside Paths keeps all the outside path information
and divides nonoverlapping outside paths into separate boxes.

Applying the Outside Paths command (Item & Split) to a merged box that contains nonoverlapping shapes (left) will create individual items (center). Each item can then be manipulated
independently (right).

å

Using the Outside Paths command, you can create individual boxes from
merged, nonoverlapping items (for example, a box created from the Text to Box
command). You can alter the content, specify various fills, and import different
pictures into the newly created, individual boxes.
• The All Paths command creates separate boxes out of every shape within a
complex box.

Applying the All Paths command (Item & Split) to a complex item (left) will create boxes
everywhere (center). Each box can then be manipulated separately (right).

• The Outside Paths and All Paths commands can be used when you have a box
that contains a border that crosses over itself (such as a figure eight).

Applying the Outside Paths or All Paths command (Item & Split) to an item that overlaps
itself (left) results in a separation of the overlapping junctions (right).

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∫

The Outside Paths command is designed to work with nonoverlapping merged
boxes; applying this command to merged boxes that overlap each other will
have no effect.

å

To undo a split operation, choose Edit & Undo (C+Z on Mac OS, Ctrl+Z
on Windows).

FILLING AND CONVERTING BOXES
You can enter and import text into text boxes, and import or paste pictures into picture
boxes. You can also convert any existing box into another type of box so that it can
hold new contents. For example, you can change a text box into a picture box, and vice
versa. A box can also be changed to have a content of None, which is useful if you
want your box to only contain color or a frame.
FILLING BOXES

• Text: To enter text, select a text box with the Content tool E. The text
insertion point i will display and you can begin typing. To import text, use
the Get Text command (File menu). For information about importing text,
see “Importing and Exporting Text” in Chapter 8, “Text Basics.”
• Picture: To import a picture, select a picture box with the Content tool E
or the Item tool e, and use the Get Picture command (File menu). For
information about importing pictures, see “Importing Pictures” in
Chapter 11, “Pictures.”

Filling a text box with text (left), and a picture box with an imported picture (right).

å

Selecting a box with the Content tool E lets you manipulate its contents.
Selecting a box with the Item tool e or the Content tool E lets you resize
the box.
For information about specifying columns for text boxes, see “Working with
Columns” in Chapter 7, “Document Layout.”

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å

Windows only: Instead of using the Get Picture command to fill a box, try dragging the icon of a picture file from the Windows desktop or the Windows Explorer
onto a picture box in QuarkXPress. You can also drag pictures from other applications that support this drag-and-drop feature. Only picture file formats supported
by QuarkXPress or other OLE-aware applications on your system can be copied.

C O N V E RT I N G B O X T Y P E

To convert a selected box to a different type, choose Picture, Text, or None from
the Content submenu (Item menu).

Choose an option from the Item & Content submenu to convert the selected box type.

å

When you choose None from the Content submenu (Item menu), the box can
be framed, or it can be filled with a background color, shade, or blend, but you
cannot add text or a picture to it.

∫

When you convert a box type, an alert displays if any contents will be lost.

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C O N V E RT I N G A T E X T B O X T O A T E X T PAT H A N D V I C E V E R S A

To convert a selected text box to a text path, choose a line shape from the
Item & Shape submenu. The first line shape œ automatically converts the
text box into a diagonal text path, the second line shape ß creates an
orthogonal text path, and the third line shape † wraps the text around
the outside of the original text box.

Converting a text box to a text path.

U N D E R S TA N D I N G S Y M M E T RY A N D S M O O T H N E S S
To draw a custom-shaped box as quickly as possible, it’s easiest to use one of the freehand box tools ƒ Ô. Unfortunately, freehand tools won’t help someone who’s hoping
to draw or trace something as smooth and symmetrical as the waves shown in Figure 1.
So how is it done?

Figure 1: Drawing a smooth, symmetrical design like this can teach you a lot.

WORKING WITH BOXES

If you’ve used other illustration programs, you may be accustomed to drawing
with open paths. In QuarkXPress, an open path is called a line. If an open path
contains text, QuarkXPress refers to it as a text path.
In QuarkXPress, a closed path is called a box. (Runaround paths and clipping
paths are also closed, but they don’t concern us here.) Although QuarkXPress
allows you to create Bézier art using lines or boxes, you may find that working
with Bézier boxes provides a greater advantage. If you work with boxes, more
options exist for color and for special operations like merging and splitting.
Plus, boxes are generally more intuitive and easier to grab and move. Besides,
when you’re done drawing, you can always change an active Bézier box into a
Bézier line by choosing Item & Shape & †.

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MINIMAL POINTS FOR MAXIMUM SMOOTHNESS

If you can’t smoothly create your design by combining ovals and rectangles
using the Merge commands (Item menu), what else can you do? To begin,
you’ll have to start drawing point-by-point using one of the Bézier box
tools ∂ ´. The following are a few tips that will make this process
more efficient:

1 With a pencil and paper, sketch the shape you want to create.
2 In your sketch, pencil in a point wherever there’s a corner. Corners are sharp
transitions. For example, the tips of the waves shown in Figure 1 are corners,
as are the points shown below in Figure 2.

Figure 2: All corners should include points.

3 Look for straight lines in your drawing. Sketch a point at both ends of every
straight line.

Figure 3: A straight line should include a point at each end.

4 Find places where the curve shifts direction, no matter how subtly, and sketch a
point at the middle of the “S” shape. Although it’s possible to make a Bézier “S”
shape without a point in the middle of the “S,” you have more control if you
include the point.

Figure 4: Find places where the curve shifts direction the way an “S” shifts direction in
midstroke. Then, sketch a point where that shift occurs — even if that shift is subtle.

5 Use one of the Bézier box tools ∂ ´ to begin plotting your sketched points.
Approximate the position of each point as you go. Click to create corner points;
click and drag the mouse slightly to create smooth points. Press Shift while
clicking and dragging to create a point that lies at 45-degree increments
from the previous point.

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Although entering points in this manner may produce poorly curved segments
at first, you can easily go back and bend the segments after the shape is completed. You may need to add a point to some curves for sufficient control (see
Figure 5). Complete the finished box by double-clicking to create the last point.

A

B

Figure 5: For smoothness, the arches in row A of this illustration should consist of one segment
only. The legs of the arches in row B bend inward at the base; they may require an additional
point for sufficient control.

6 Make sure Item & Edit & Shape is checked.
7 Drag different parts of each segment to bend them — just as you would a piece
of wire. (Straight segments need to be changed to curved segments before you
can bend them. Click the ∑ button in the Measurements palette to change active
straight segments to curved ones.) For added control, use the curve handles to
bend the segments.
THE FINISHED SHAPE — ALMOST

Using the eight steps just described, you should have no problem drawing a
shape that is as smooth as the one repeated in the wave design. Boxes drawn
using this procedure may require a little adjustment, but after you get the
basic idea, you’ll be able to draw equally smooth shapes without preplanning
or pencil sketching. You can then learn to incorporate keyboard commands
(listed earlier in this chapter in “Reshaping Boxes”) to manipulate points as
you go along — eliminating much of the work required for adjustment.
Figure 6 shows what the repeating shape in the wave design looks like with all
its points selected. Five corner points and two smooth points were used to
draw the shape.

Figure 6: The repeating shape used to create the design in Figure 1 is shown with all points
selected. The left and right sides of the base are designed as complementary so that a
seamless transition is created when the shape is tiled.

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å

Pressing Shift while dragging a curve handle has a similar effect as
Shift+dragging a point. The curve handle (and possibly its partner, depending
on the type of point) is constrained to invisible guides that radiate from
the point at 45-degree increments. This can be useful when creating
symmetrical designs.

P R E PA R I N G A S H A P E T O B E T I L E D

Now that you have some smoothness in your drawing, how do you incorporate
symmetry? Symmetry is a matter of relying on the Duplicate command, the
Merge commands, some flipping, and frequent snapping to guides. If the repeating shape in your design must flow seamlessly into its duplicate, you’ll have to
make sure this shape can be tiled before you do anything else.
The wave shape in Figure 6 was prepared for tiling by snapping the bottom
four corner points to a pair of horizontal guides.
In addition, two of the curve handles were made complementary so that a
smooth curve would occur at the point where the tiled shapes are to meet. As
you can see in Figure 6, the curve handle on the lower left is angled exactly
180 degrees opposite the curve handle on the lower right. Curve handles with
an angle difference of 180 degrees combine to create a smooth curve when the
shape is tiled.
D U P L I C AT I N G

After applying color and other attributes to your shape, use the Duplicate
command (C+D on Mac OS, Ctrl+D on Windows) or the Step and Repeat
command (C+Option+D on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+D on Windows) to duplicate
it in the desired quantity. This provides a collection of similar shapes that
can be combined to create a single, symmetrical box.
FLIPPING

If you want a duplicated shape to mirror the original, you can flip it by performing the following steps:

1 Make sure Item & Edit & Shape is unchecked for the active item, so that its
rectangular bounding box displays.

2 Select the value in the W field (if you want a horizontal flip) or the H field
(if you want a vertical flip) in the Measurements palette, and copy the
value to the Clipboard (C+C on Mac OS, Ctrl+C on Windows).

3 Drag the left-middle or right-middle resize handle (if you want a horizontal flip),
or drag the top-middle or bottom-middle resize handle (if you want a vertical
flip) until the item is reduced to the surface area of a straight line, and keep
dragging. Release the mouse button after the bounding box has been dragged
“through itself.”

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4 Select the appropriate measurement field (W or H) in the Measurements palette
and paste (C+V on Mac OS, Ctrl+V on Windows) the value you just copied. The
Bézier box is flipped. If you also want the box’s contents flipped, you can use the
Flip commands (Style menu) to do so at the end of the process.

Figure 7: A Bézier box can be flipped by dragging its bounding box through itself.

å

If you want to delete part of a Bézier box, try using the Difference command in
the Merge submenu (Item menu). If two partially overlapped boxes are selected,
the Difference command removes the front box and cuts out the overlapping
area from the back box. For example, if you want a half-circle, draw a rectangle
over the top of an existing circle so that it overlaps the circle halfway; then select
both boxes and choose Item & Merge & Difference. A half-circle is the result.

ALIGNING AND MERGING

If you want all the duplicated boxes to behave as a single box with one set of
contents and no white space in between, you must align and merge them.
If you’ve already performed an accurate step and repeat with no flipping, you
may be able to multiple-select the boxes and choose Item & Merge & Union. If
this does not work, you can use the Space/Align command to align your boxes.

Figure 8: These two shapes were tiled using the Space/Align command.

Alternatively, if your boxes are too oddly shaped for the Space/Align command
to be effective, you can use the following procedure to align boxes at a specific
Bézier point:

1 Make sure Snap to Guides is checked in the View menu, and drag a horizontal
and vertical guide from the rulers of the document window to create a crossed
guide pair.

2 Determine which Bézier point will serve as the juncture for aligning the boxes.
3 Press C+Shift+A (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Shift+A (Windows), or triple-click a point in
the active box to activate all its points. (Double-clicking a point will work if the
box contains only one path.)

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4 Determine which point will serve as the juncture, and drag it to the crossed
guide pair. All the points are selected, so the entire box now moves without
reshaping. This style of box movement lets you snap a box to guides according
to any point you drag.

5 Repeat Step 4 for the duplicated item(s).
6 Marquee or Shift+click to select any boxes that you want to merge into one box.
Then, choose Item & Merge & Union to merge all of them into one continuous Bézier box. Repeating this procedure several times allows you to create
smooth, symmetrical boxes.
R A D I A L S Y M M E T RY

You can create radial symmetry (like the kind shown in Figure 9) using all the
same procedures described so far.
The only additional technique you’ll need to know when creating radial symmetry is field math. Field math is the application’s ability to accept mathematical
operators (such as +, –, /, and *) in the fields of dialog boxes and palettes.

Figure 9: This design was created by using a field math value of +45˚ in the box angle field r
for each box as it was duplicated from the previous one. The boxes were then snapped to a
crossed guide pair.

When the design in Figure 9 was created, “+45” was entered after the existing
value in the box angle r field in the Measurements palette as each box was
duplicated from the previous one. The 45 value was determined by dividing
360 by the total amount of duplicate shapes (360 ÷ 8 = 45).

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Creating Lines

Chapter 5: Line Basics
A single line can be as evocative as an entire landscape. Lines can express mood,
mark a boundary, or draw the eye to an important area. Lines are a fundamental
part of design, adding meaning and energy to your page layout.
QuarkXPress allows you to create and manipulate a variety of lines, from simple
straight lines to complex Bézier lines. You can also reshape and rotate your lines to
give your layout depth and movement.

C R E AT I N G L I N E S
QuarkXPress provides four line creation tools that let you draw straight, curved, and
combination lines. You can create single-segment straight lines, or you can use a Bézier
line tool to create single- or multiple-segment straight or curved lines.

Create lines using the four line tools, including the pop-out tools, in the Tools palette.

C R E AT I N G L I N E S

Select a line tool from the Tools palette and move the Crosshair pointer c to
any position on the page. Then, click and drag, or click and create points, to
draw a line. You create lines using the following tools:
• The Line tool œ creates straight lines at any angle.
• The Orthogonal Line tool o creates straight horizontal or vertical lines.
• The Bézier Line tool ∞ creates lines with curved and straight line segments.

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• The Freehand Line tool § creates freehand lines with curved line segments.

Create straight lines using the Line tool œ and the Orthogonal Line tool o; create curved lines
using the Bézier Line tool ∞ and the Freehand Line tool §.

å

You can constrain a line created with the Line tool œ to 0°, 45°, or 90° by
pressing Shift while you draw the line.
To keep the line tool selected, press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) when
selecting the tool.
To make a straight line that flows above or below specified text, see “Creating
Rules Above and Below Paragraphs” in Chapter 10, “Graphics in Typography.”

C R E AT I N G B É Z I E R L I N E S

The Bézier Line tool ∞ lets you draw Bézier lines that can have multiple straight
and curved line segments. The Freehand Line tool § lets you draw sketchlike shapes that contain multiple curved line segments.
USING THE BÉZIER LINE TOOL ∞

1 Select the Bézier Line tool ∞ from the Tools palette. Move the Crosshair
pointer c to any position on the page; click to establish the first point.

˝
Click to establish the first point of a Bézier line.

2 To make a straight line segment, click wherever you want to position the
next point. Do not click and drag the mouse.

Create a straight line segment by clicking once to establish the first point; then click at
another position to establish the second point.

å

A point connects line segments and defines where line segments start and end.
Points attached to curved segments have curve handles.

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3 To make a curved line segment, click and drag wherever you want the next
point positioned. A point with two curve handles will display. You control the
curve’s size and shape as you drag a curve handle.

Create a curved line segment by clicking or clicking and dragging to establish the first
point; then click and drag at another position to establish the next point and another
curved line segment.

å

Curve handles extend from either side of a point and control a curve’s shape.

4 Continue creating points by clicking or clicking and dragging.
5 You can end the line using one of two methods: You can double-click any time
after creating the first point, or select a different tool from the Tools palette.

A completed Bézier line that contains both curved and straight line segments.

∫

To constrain a point (in relation to the previously created point) to 45° angles,
press Shift before clicking. To constrain a curve handle to 45° angles, press Shift
while dragging a curve handle.
USING THE FREEHAND LINE TOOL §

Select the Freehand Line tool from the Tools palette. Move the Crosshair
pointer c to any position on the page; then click and drag in a continuous
motion until you have drawn a freehand line. Release the mouse when you
are finished drawing the line.

Create freehand lines by clicking and dragging in a continuous motion.

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RESIZING LINES
You can change the length of straight lines created with either the Line œ or
Orthogonal Line o tools, and you can scale lines created with either the Bézier
Line ∞ or Freehand Line § tools by resizing their bounding boxes.
R E S I Z I N G S T R A I G H T L I N E S C R E AT E D W I T H T H E L I N E œ A N D
O RT H O G O N A L o L I N E T O O L S

You can resize active straight lines using:
• The Tools palette: Select the Item tool e or the Content tool E and move the
Arrow pointer a over a resizing handle to display the Resizing pointer f; click
and drag the handle to a new location to reduce or extend the length of the line.

Resize straight lines by dragging a resizing handle.

å

If you’ve created a line with the Line tool œ, you can lengthen or shorten it
and constrain it to its original angle by pressing Option+Shift (Mac OS) or
Alt+Shift (Windows) while dragging a resizing handle.
You can constrain a line created with the Line tool œ to 0°, 45°, or 90° by
pressing Shift while you resize.
• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows). Click the Mode pop-up menu to display the four mode options
(see “Line modes for straight lines” later in this chapter). Choose Left Point,
Midpoint, or Right Point to display a Length field. Enter values in the
Length field to precisely change the length of a line, then click OK.

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Use the Length field (Item & Modify & Line tab) to precisely resize lines.

å

When the Item tool e is selected, double-click a line to quickly display the
Modify dialog box. If you are modifying a Bézier or freehand line, make sure
Item & Edit & Shape is unchecked before double-clicking a line; otherwise
you may inadvertently select or edit a point instead of displaying the Modify
dialog box.
• The Measurements palette: Choose either Left Point, Midpoint, or Right Point
from the pop-up menu to display the L (Length) field. To precisely change
the length of a line, enter a value in the L field, then press Return (Mac OS)
or Enter (Windows).

Resize a line using the L field in the Measurements palette.

å

You can quickly display the Measurements palette by pressing C+Option+M
(Mac OS) or Ctrl+Alt+M (Windows), or by pressing F9.

∫

If the Endpoints Mode option is active in either the Modify dialog box or the
Measurements palette, choose another option from the Mode pop-up menu
to display the L (Length) field.

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RESIZING BÉZIER LINES

You can resize any Bézier line by modifying the size of its bounding box. A
bounding box is a nonprinting, rectangular box that encloses every curved line
when Item & Edit & Shape is unchecked. You can resize active Bézier lines in
bounding boxes using:
• The Tools palette: Select the Item tool e or the Content tool E and move the
Arrow pointer a over a resizing handle to display the Resizing pointer f; click
and drag the resizing handle to a new location to reduce or enlarge the line.

You can resize a Bézier line by enlarging its bounding box. Bounding boxes have eight resizing handles. Four of the handles on this particular bounding box look like small white
squares because they are positioned on the black line.

å

To resize lines proportionally, press Option+Shift (Mac OS) or Alt+Shift
(Windows) while dragging a bounding box’s resizing handle.
• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows). Enter values in the Width and Height fields to precisely change
the size of a Bézier line’s bounding box. Click OK.

Using the Width and Height fields (Item & Modify & Line tab), you can enter numerical
values to precisely resize a Bézier line’s bounding box.

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• The Measurements palette: To precisely change the width and height of a Bézier
line’s bounding box, enter values in the W (Width) and H (Height) fields, then
press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows).

RESHAPING LINES
You can reshape any line using the shapes offered in the Shape submenu (Item menu).
You can reshape Bézier lines by repositioning points, curve handles, and line segments.
Bézier attributes are described in detail in “Reshaping Bézier Lines” later in this section.
RESHAPING LINES USING THE SHAPE SUBMENU

The Shape submenu (Item menu) contains three line shapes and six box shapes
that you can apply to lines.
To change the shape of an active line, choose Item & Shape to display
the submenu. Choose a shape from the submenu and the line will
reshape automatically.

Use the options in the Shape submenu (Item menu) to change the shape of an active line.

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∫

Freehand lines can be reshaped using the techniques for reshaping Bézier lines.

å

When you convert a line into a Bézier box by choosing Item & Shape & ®, an
alert displays warning you that the line will be converted into a hollow box with
a narrow content area. The alert also provides you with instructions for converting the line into a solid box.
QuarkXPress traces the actual line width, along with any arrowhead, tail
feather, dash, or multiple-line pattern, to produce a Bézier box. However, there
is another way to convert a line into a box — by joining the line’s end-points.
Press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) and then choose Item & Shape & ®.
If the end-points are on top of each other, they will be joined into one point.
If they are not on top of each other, a new line segment will be added that
connects the two end-points.
To convert a straight line into a Bézier line, use the Shape submenu (Item &
Shape & †). The line will retain its original shape, but it will be converted
into an editable Bézier line.

RESHAPING BÉZIER LINES

QuarkXPress lets you reshape Bézier lines by manipulating points, curve
handles, and line segments. Key Bézier concepts are defined below.
DEFINITIONS

• Point: A point connects line segments and defines where line segments start and
end. Points attached to curved segments have curve handles. QuarkXPress offers
three types of points: corner, smooth, and symmetrical.
• Corner point: A corner point connects two straight lines, a straight line and a
curved line, or two noncontinuous curved lines. With curved lines, the corner
point’s curve handles can be manipulated independently, usually to form a
sharp transition between the two segments.

Corner points

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• Smooth point: A smooth point connects two curved lines to form a continuous
curve. The curve handles always rest on a straight line through the point, but
they can be manipulated independently.

Smooth point

• Symmetrical point: A symmetrical point connects two curved lines to form a
continuous curve. The result is similar to a smooth point, but the curve handles
always rest on a straight line through the point and are always equidistant from
the point.

Symmetrical point

• Curve handles: Curve handles extend from either side of a point and control
a curve’s shape.

Curve handles

• Line segments: Line segments are straight or curved line sections positioned
between two points.

Line segments

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RESHAPING BÉZIER LINES WITH POINTERS

When Shape (Item & Edit) is checked and the Arrow pointer a is positioned
over an active Bézier line, various pointers display indicating whether you can
select a point ˝, the curve handles Ï Ó, or a line segment ˆ. Click and drag
using the pointers to reshape a Bézier line.

˝
The Point pointer ˝ lets you manipulate corner, smooth, and symmetrical points. To reposition
a point, click and drag.

Ï

Ó

The Curve Handle pointers Ï Ó let you manipulate both curve handles. Click a point when
the Point pointer ˝ displays. If the point has accessible curve handles, the curve handles will
display. To manipulate the shape of a curve, click and drag a curve handle.

ˆ
The Line Segment pointer ˆ lets you manipulate both straight and curved line segments.
To manipulate the shape and position of a line segment, click and drag.

Use the Point pointer ˝ to reshape an active line.

å

A bounding box may display immediately after you draw a Bézier line, depending on whether the Shape option is checked. Checking Shape (Item & Edit)
gives you access to the points, curve handles, and line segments within the
bounding box. If Shape is unchecked, you can quickly access a Bézier line’s
shape by pressing Shift+F4 (Mac OS) or F10 (Windows).
You can connect line segments by positioning two end-points from two
different line segments on top of each other. Select both lines, and then
choose Item & Merge & Join Endpoints.

RESHAPING BÉZIER LINES WITH COMMANDS

You can also manipulate Bézier lines by using the pointers with options in the
Item menu and the Measurements palette, by using keyboard commands and
modifier keys, or by adding and deleting points.
• Reshaping Bézier lines with the Item menu:
Points: Select a point; choose Item & Point/Segment Type to display the submenu; then check either Corner Point, Smooth Point, or Symmetrical Point,
depending on how you want to manipulate the active point.

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Line segments: Select a line segment; choose Item & Point/Segment Type to
display the submenu; then check either Straight Segment or Curved Segment
to make the line segment straight or curved.

å

You can reshape a Bézier line while you are drawing it by pressing C (Mac OS)
or Ctrl (Windows) while repositioning the points, curve handles, or line
segments. Then resume line creation.

Use the Point/Segment Type submenu (Item menu) to choose either a Corner, Smooth,
or Symmetrical Point.

Use the Point/Segment Type submenu (Item menu) to convert a straight line segment into
a curved line segment (as shown), or vice versa.

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• Reshaping Bézier lines with the Measurements palette:
Points: Select a point with the Point pointer ˝; then click either †, ¥, or ® to
convert the point to a symmetrical, smooth, or corner point. Enter values in the
XP and YP fields to reposition an active point.
Curve handles: Select a point with the Point pointer ˝; if the point displays
curve handles, enter values in the r fields to reposition the angle of either curve
handle, or enter values in the „ and Œ fields to resize either curve handle (enter
zero to retract the curve handle).

å

The type of point or line segment automatically determines the type of curve
handles available for manipulation. You cannot directly manipulate the curve
handles through the Item menu, but you can indirectly affect them depending
on the type of point and line segment that you choose.
For example, if you initially created two corner points (and thus a straight line
segment), you cannot access the curve handles. However, if you select the line
segment and choose Curved Segment from the Point/Segment Type submenu
(Item menu), or click the curved line segment ∑ in the Measurements palette,
the act of converting the line segment will make the curve handles accessible.
• Line segments: Select a line segment with the Line Segment pointer ˆ; then click
either œ or ∑ to convert the line segment to a straight or curved segment.

Use the Measurements palette to convert point and line segment types.

• Reshaping Bézier lines with keyboard commands:
CHANGE IN POINT
OR LINE SEGMENT

MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Corner point

Option+F1

Ctrl+F1

Smooth point

Option+F2

Ctrl+F2

Symmetrical point

Option+F3

Ctrl+F3

Straight line segment

Option+
Shift+F1

Ctrl+
Shift+F1

Curved line segment

Option+
Shift+F2

Ctrl+
Shift+F2

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• Reshaping Bézier lines with modifier keys:
CHANGE IN POINT
OR CURVE HANDLES

MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Add point

Option+click
line segment

Alt+click
line segment

Delete point

Option+click
point

Alt+click
point

Smooth to corner
point (vice versa)

Control+drag
curve handle

Ctrl+Shift+drag
curve handle

Snap point to 45° guides

Shift+drag
point

Shift+drag
point

Snap curve handles
to 45° guides

Shift+drag
curve handle

Shift+drag
curve handle

Retract one curve handle

Option+click
curve handle

Alt+click
curve handle

Retract curve handles

Control+Shift+ Ctrl+Shift+click
click point
point

Expose curve handles

Control+Shift+ Ctrl+Shift+drag
drag point
point

ADDING AND DELETING POINTS

To add a point, move the pointer over a line segment. When the Line Segment
pointer ˆ displays, Option+click (Mac OS) or Alt+click (Windows) to create
a new point.
To delete a point, move the pointer over the point you want to delete. When the
Point pointer ˝ displays, press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) to change it
to the Point Deletion pointer v . Click the point to delete it.
å

To make a sharp corner from a round curve, select a point on the curve and
Option+click (Mac OS) or Alt+click (Windows) one of the curve handles. To
access the retracted curve handle, move the Arrow pointer a over the point.
When a Curve Handle pointer displays, click and drag the curve handle so
that it is again visible.

Retract a curve handle to create a transition in line segments.

You can merge lines with other items by multiple-selecting the items
and combining them using the Merge commands in the Item menu. For
information about merging items, see “Merging and Splitting Boxes” in
Chapter 4, “Box Basics.”

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MOVING LINES
You can move lines within the same page, across page boundaries, or onto the pasteboard. You can also drag lines to other open QuarkXPress documents or libraries. The
method for moving lines differs depending on whether you are moving a straight line
or a Bézier line.
M O V I N G S T R A I G H T L I N E S C R E AT E D W I T H T H E L I N E œ A N D
O RT H O G O N A L o L I N E T O O L S

You can move active straight lines by dragging them with the Item tool e or
the Content tool E, or you can enter precise values in the Modify dialog box
(Item & Modify) or the Measurements palette. You can move active lines using:
• The Tools palette: Select the Item tool e or the Content tool E and drag a line
to a new location.

Move straight lines using the Item tool e.

å

To move a line to another open QuarkXPress document, either select the line
with the Item tool e and drag it into another document, or copy and paste it.
• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows). Choose an option from the Mode pop-up menu, then enter values
in the Across and Down fields (modes are described below). The fields will vary
depending on the mode selected. Click OK.
• The Measurements palette: Choose an option from the Mode pop-up menu,
then enter values in the X and Y fields. The fields will vary depending on the
mode selected. Press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows).

Reposition active lines by entering values in the X and Y coordinate fields in the Measurements palette. The fields vary depending on the option selected in the Mode pop-up menu.

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ç

å

KEYBOARD COMMANDS:
A U T O M AT I C

MAC OS

WINDOWS

M O V I N G F E AT U R E S

COMMAND

COMMAND

Nudge lines in
1-point increments

arrow keys

arrow keys

Nudge lines in
.1-point increments

Option+
arrow keys

Alt+
arrow keys

To anchor lines in text, just as you can anchor boxes, see “Anchoring Boxes and
Lines in Text” in Chapter 10, “Graphics in Typography.”
To make a straight line that flows above or below specified text, see “Creating
Rules Above and Below Paragraphs” in Chapter 10, “Graphics in Typography.”
LINE MODES FOR STRAIGHT LINES

Before moving straight lines by entering values into fields, it is important to
understand how QuarkXPress describes lines. There are four line modes: Endpoints, Left Point, Midpoint, and Right Point. Depending on the mode you
choose in either the Line tab (Item & Modify) or the Measurements palette,
line length and position will be described differently.
• The Endpoints mode: The X1 field indicates the horizontal position of the first
end-point; the Y1 field indicates the vertical position of the first end-point. The
X2 field indicates the horizontal position of the last end-point; the Y2 field
indicates the vertical position of the last end-point.

• The Left Point mode: The X1 field indicates the horizontal position of the
leftmost end-point; the Y1 field indicates the vertical position of the leftmost end-point.

• The Midpoint mode: The XC field indicates the horizontal position of the midpoint of the line; the YC field indicates the vertical position of the midpoint
of the line.

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• The Right Point mode: The X2 field indicates the horizontal position of the
rightmost end-point; the Y2 field indicates the vertical position of the rightmost end-point.

å

When a straight line is in Left Point, Midpoint, or Right Point mode, you know
the precise coordinates of that point, plus the angle and length of the line.
MOVING BÉZIER LINES

It is generally advisable to move a Bézier line when its bounding box displays
(so you won’t accidentally reshape the line). Choose Item & Edit; then
uncheck Shape to display the bounding box. You can move an active
Bézier line using:
• The Tools palette: With the Item tool e selected, drag the line to a new
location. If you have the Content tool E selected, press C (Mac OS) or
Ctrl (Windows) to temporarily activate the Item tool as you drag the line
to a new location.

Use the Item tool e to move curved lines in bounding boxes.

• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows). To reposition a line horizontally, enter a value in the Origin Across
field and click OK. To reposition a line vertically, enter a value in the Origin
Down field and click OK.

Enter values in the Origin Across and Origin Down fields (Item & Modify & Line tab) to
move a Bézier line.

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å

The Origin Across value is the position on the horizontal ruler where the left
end of the line begins. The Origin Down value is the position on the vertical
ruler where the left end of the line begins.
• The Measurements palette: To reposition a line horizontally, enter a value in
the X field. To reposition a line vertically, enter a value in the Y field, then press
Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows).

Move lines by entering values in the X and Y coordinate fields in the Measurements palette.

ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS:
A U T O M AT I C

MAC OS

WINDOWS

M O V I N G F E AT U R E S

COMMAND

COMMAND

Nudge lines in
1-point increments

arrow keys

arrow keys

Nudge lines in
.1-point increments

Option+
arrow keys

Alt+
arrow keys

A P P LY I N G L I N E S T Y L E S
You can apply styles to lines by choosing from a variety of line styles, arrowheads, widths,
colors, and shades. These options are available in the Style menu, the Modify dialog box
(Item menu), and the Measurements palette.
CHOOSING A LINE STYLE

QuarkXPress offers eleven preset line style options. You can apply line styles
to active lines using:
• The Style menu: Choose Style & Line Style to display the Line Style submenu.
Choose an option from the submenu.

Choose an option from the Style & Line Style submenu to apply a style to a selected line.

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• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows). Choose an option from the Style pop-up menu, and click OK.
• The Measurements palette: Click the style pop-up menu and choose a line
style from the list.

å

Using the Dashes & Stripes dialog box (Edit menu), you can create an assortment of custom line styles. The line styles you create can be applied to existing
lines using the Line Style submenu (Style menu), the Line tab of the Modify
dialog box (Item menu), or the style pop-up menu in the Measurements palette.
For information about frames, see “Framing Boxes” in Chapter 4, “Box Basics.”
You can edit any existing or custom dash or stripe style — except the Solid
style — in the Dashes & Stripes dialog box (Edit menu). Select the style from
the list and click Edit. The Edit dialog box is the same dialog box that you use
when you create a custom dash or stripe.

CHOOSING AN ARROWHEAD

QuarkXPress lets you choose from a selection of six line end styles, including
arrowheads and tail feathers. You can apply an arrowhead to an active
line using:
• The Style menu: Choose Style & Arrowheads to display the Arrowheads
submenu. Choose an option from the submenu.
• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows). Choose an option from the Arrowheads pop-up menu, and
click OK.
• The Measurements palette: Click the arrowheads pop-up menu and choose
an arrowhead style from the list.

Choose an option from the arrowheads pop-up menu in the Measurements palette, and
its attributes will automatically affect the active line.

å

You can preset the preferences for the lines you draw by either double-clicking
a line tool in the Tools palette or using the controls in the Preferences dialog
box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences & Tools pane). You can preset Style,
Arrowheads, Width, Color, Shade, and Runaround status of lines you create;
in a print document, you can also opt to Suppress Printout of lines.

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CHOOSING A WIDTH

You can specify the thickness of an active line using:
• The Style menu: Choose Style & Width to display the Width submenu.
Choose a width from the submenu, or choose Other to display the Line
Width field in the Modify dialog box. Enter a value in the Line Width
field, and click OK.

Choose Style & Width to display the Width submenu.

• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows). Choose an option from the Line Width pop-up menu, or enter
a value in the field. Click OK.
• The Measurements palette: Either click the W (Width) arrow < to choose a
width from the pop-up menu, or enter a value in the W (Width) field; then
press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows).

Choose a width from the W pop-up menu in the Measurements palette, and it will automatically affect the active line.

å

The printed width of a hairline rule is .125 point wide on a PostScript imagesetter. A laser printer will print a wider hairline.

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ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS
MAC OS

WINDOWS

CHANGE IN WIDTH

COMMAND

COMMAND

Increase 1 point

C+Option+
Shift+>

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+>

Decrease 1 point

C+Option+
Shift+<

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+<

Increase preset increments

C+Shift+>

Ctrl+Shift+>

Decrease preset increments

C+Shift+<

Ctrl+Shift+<

∫

Line widths displayed in the Width submenu are measured in points.

å

When you increase or decrease the width of an active line using the preset
keyboard equivalent commands C+Shift+> and C+Shift+< (Mac OS) or
Ctrl+Shift+> and Ctrl+Shift+< (Windows), the width changes to the next
larger or smaller increment in the following range: 0 (hairline), 1, 2, 4, 6, 8,
and 12 points.

CHOOSING COLORS AND SHADES FOR LINES AND GAPS

QuarkXPress lists all the colors defined for a document — default colors, colors
created in the Colors dialog box (Edit menu), and spot colors imported with
EPS picture files. You can apply a color and shade to an active line using:
• The Style menu: Choose Style & Color to display the Color submenu. Choose
a color from the submenu.
Choose Style & Shade to display the Shade submenu. Choose a percentage from
the submenu, or choose Other to display the Shade field in the Modify dialog
box. Enter a value in the Shade field, and click OK.

Choose Style & Shade to display the Shade submenu.

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• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows). Choose a color from the Color pop-up menu, choose a shade from
the Shade pop-up menu, or enter a value in the Shade field. If you have chosen
a line style with multiple dashes or stripes, you can choose a Gap color from
the Color pop-up menu, choose a Gap shade from the Shade pop-up menu,
or enter a value in the Shade field. Click OK.
Selecting a color and shade from the Gap area (Item & Modify & Line tab) will color and
shade the space between a line’s multiple stripes or dashes.

• The Colors palette: Choose View & Show Colors (F12) to display the Colors
palette, then click one of the colors in the list. Click the arrow < next to the
current shade value to display a list of percent values; choose a percentage from
the list. You can also select the current shade value in the field, enter a new
value, and press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows).

Choose View & Show Colors to display the Colors palette.

∫

You can add colors to the color list using the Colors command (Edit menu).

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Selecting Items

Chapter 6: Manipulating Items
Every QuarkXPress document uses items. Items are the building blocks of page layout.
Items include boxes, lines, tables, text paths, and any combination of grouped or
multiple-selected items.
QuarkXPress items can be cut and then pasted in new locations, locked so they cannot
move, duplicated once or many times, stacked to create unusual visual effects, and
manipulated in other ways.
To manipulate specific aspects of boxes, lines, tables, or text paths, please refer to their
individual chapters.

SELECTING ITEMS
There are four kinds of items in print documents (boxes, lines, text paths, and tables)
and six kinds of items in Web documents (boxes, lines, text paths, tables, forms, and
form controls). Items can be combined into groups, and they can be multiple-selected.
To manipulate items in QuarkXPress, they must be selected. Once selected, most kinds
of items display outlines and handles for reshaping.
SELECTING ITEMS

Select either the Item tool e or the Content tool E and move the Arrow
pointer a over an item. Click once to select a single item, Shift+click individual
items to select more than one item at a time, or draw a marquee around an area
to select the items you want.
DESELECTING ITEMS

To deselect an active item, click outside it. When the Item tool e is selected,
you can press Tab to deselect any active items.

Use the Item tool e or the Content tool E to select an individual item, such as a box (left), or
draw a marquee to multiple items (right). Active items display darkened outlines and handles
for reshaping.

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Selecting Items

å

In general, select items with the Item tool e to manipulate the entire item,
and select items with the Content tool E to manipulate item contents. To
select multiple items using the Content tool E or the Item tool e, you can
Shift+click each item or draw a marquee around an area containing the items
you want. For the most part, you will want to have e selected when you are
manipulating items.
When e is selected and you choose Edit & Select All (C+A on Mac OS,
Ctrl+A on Windows), all the items on the current page or spread (and the
pasteboard area next to the current page or spread) are selected.

MOVING, RESHAPING, AND RESIZING ITEMS
With the exception of image maps, you can move, reshape, and resize items using the
fields in the Modify dialog box (Item & Modify), the fields in the Measurements
palette, or by using the Item tool e.
MOVING ITEMS

You can move items by entering values in the Origin Across and Origin Down
fields in the Modify dialog box (Item menu), by entering values in the X and Y
fields in the Measurements palette, and by manually moving items using
the Item tool e. If you are manually moving a Bézier item, you may want to
uncheck Shape (Item & Edit) to display its bounding box. Moving a Bézier item
in its bounding box avoids accidental reshaping.
RESHAPING ITEMS

You can reshape items by choosing options from the Shape submenu
(Item menu), and in the case of Bézier items, by manipulating points,
curve handles, and straight and curved line segments. To reshape Bézier
items, make sure Shape is checked (Item & Edit).
RESIZING ITEMS

You can resize items by entering values in the Width and Height fields in the
Modify dialog box (Item menu), by entering values in the W (Width) and
H (Height) fields in the Measurements palette, and by manually resizing width
and height using the Item tool e. If you are manually resizing a Bézier item,
you may want to first display its bounding box by unchecking Shape (Item &
Edit). Resizing a Bézier item in its bounding box avoids accidental reshaping.

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Moving, Reshaping, and Resizing Items

å

To move, reshape, and resize boxes, see Chapter 4, “Box Basics.” To move,
reshape, and resize lines and text paths, see Chapter 5, “Line Basics.”
For information about Bézier items, see the “Creating” and “Reshaping” sections
in Chapter 4, “Box Basics,” and Chapter 5, “Line Basics.”

C U T T I N G , C O P Y I N G , A N D PA S T I N G I T E M S
When the Item tool e is selected, the Cut, Copy, and Paste commands (Edit menu)
are available for active boxes, lines, and text paths.
CUTTING ITEMS

Choose Edit & Cut (C+X on Mac OS, Ctrl+X on Windows) to remove active
items from the document. When items are cut using the Content tool E on
Windows, both the item and its contents are temporarily saved to the Clipboard.
COPYING ITEMS

Choose Edit & Copy (C+C on Mac OS, Ctrl+C on Windows) to save a copy of
active items to the Clipboard. When items are copied, both the item and its
contents are temporarily saved to the Clipboard.

Use the Edit menu to cut, copy, and paste items. These commands are applicable to active
single, multiple-selected, and grouped items.

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Cutting, Copying, and Pasting Items

∫

If you Cut or Copy a text box that is part of a linked chain, the linked text will
be included on the Clipboard along with the text box.

PA S T I N G I T E M S

Choose Edit & Paste (C+V on Mac OS, Ctrl+V on Windows) to place a copy of
the items contained on the Clipboard in the center of the document window.

Check Auto Constrain in the General pane of the Preferences dialog box (Edit &
Preferences & Preferences), to paste items in the center of an active box.

∫

If Auto Constrain is checked (Edit & Preferences & Preferences &
General pane) and a box is active, the Paste feature places pasted items in the
center of the active box. For example, if a text box is active and you paste a picture box, the picture box will be pasted within the text box and confined to
the text area. This causes text to flow around the picture box according to the
runaround specifications (Item & Runaround). If you attempt to paste items
into a box that is too small, QuarkXPress displays an alert.

å

Choose Edit & Show Clipboard to view the Clipboard and its contents. The
Clipboard window displays text, pictures, and items that you cut or copied. The
Paste command places the current contents of the Clipboard in the document.
To anchor a box within text, use the Item tool e to select the box you want
to anchor and choose Edit & Copy (C+C on Mac OS, Ctrl+C on Windows) or
Edit & Cut (C+X on Mac OS, Ctrl+X on Windows). Then, with the Content
tool E selected, place the Text Insertion bar I within the text where you want
to anchor the box and choose Edit & Paste (C+V on Mac OS, Ctrl+V on
Windows). This causes the box to act like a character and flow with the text.

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Clearing and Deleting Items

CLEARING AND DELETING ITEMS
You can remove items from your document completely by using the Clear (Mac OS
only) and Delete commands. With the Item tool e selected, you can remove active
items using:
• The Edit menu: Choose Edit & Clear (Mac OS) or Edit & Delete (Windows)
to remove active items (along with their contents) from the document.
• The Item menu: Choose Item & Delete (C+K on Mac OS, Ctrl+K on Windows)
to remove active items (along with their contents) from the document.
• Keyboard commands: Press Clear (Mac OS only) or Delete to remove active
items (along with their contents) from the document.

∫

Cleared and deleted items are not copied to the Clipboard. When the Content
tool E is selected on Mac OS, the Clear command removes the contents from
active items, and the Delete command deletes the items entirely. When E is
selected on Windows, pressing Delete or using the Delete command in the Edit
menu removes the content of an active picture box or the selected text of an
active text box or text path.

å

If you clear or delete a text box that is part of a linked text chain, text in the
box is not deleted. The text either reflows into subsequent boxes or generates
an overflow symbol at the end of the chain, depending on the status of the
Auto Page Insertion pop-up menu (Edit & Preferences & Preferences &
General pane).
When the Item tool e is selected, and points on a Bézier item are active, you
can press Delete to delete just those points rather than the entire item.

UNDOING AND REDOING ACTIONS
The Undo command (Edit menu) reverses the last action performed on an item.
For example, if you accidentally cut a picture box, the Undo command will bring
the picture box back into the document from the Clipboard. The Redo command
(Edit menu) lets you reimplement an action you had undone. You can choose Undo
or Redo when either the Item tool e or the Content tool E is selected.
UNDOING ACTIONS

Choose Edit & Undo (C+Z on Mac OS, Ctrl+Z on Windows) to reverse the
last action performed. The menu item identifies the specific action that can be
undone. For example, the Undo Item Deletion command is available in the
Edit menu after you have used the Cut command. Cannot Undo displays as
gray text when the Undo feature is unavailable.

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Undoing and Redoing Actions

REDOING ACTIONS

To reimplement the action, choose Edit & Redo (C+Z on Mac OS, Ctrl+Z
on Windows) after you undo an action.

Use the Edit menu to undo or redo a previously performed action.

å

You can use the keyboard command for Undo (C+Z on Mac OS, Ctrl+Z on
Windows) to reset the values in most dialog boxes to their original values.

LOCKING AND UNLOCKING ITEMS
You can lock boxes, lines, and text paths so that they cannot be inadvertently moved
from their position on the page or pasteboard. You can also unlock items when you
want to move them.
LOCKING ITEMS

Choose Item & Lock (F6) to lock active items so they cannot be moved
or resized with the Item tool e. You can still reposition and resize locked
items by entering new values in the Modify dialog box (Item menu) or the
Measurements palette.
å

You can move and scale pictures within a locked picture box by entering values
in the Modify dialog box (Item menu) or the Measurements palette. You can
edit text inside a locked text box or on a locked text path using the Content
tool E. You can also modify the style, size, and endcaps of a locked line or text
path using the Modify dialog box (Item menu) or the Measurements palette.

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UNLOCKING ITEMS

Choose Item & Unlock (F6) if you no longer want active items to be locked.

Lock active items by choosing Item & Lock. When a locked item is selected with the
Item tool e, the Padlock pointer y displays (right), indicating that the item cannot be
manually repositioned or resized. Locked items can only be manipulated by entering
values in the Modify dialog box (Item menu) or in the Measurements palette.

C O N T R O L L I N G T H E S TA C K I N G O R D E R O F I T E M S
When two or more items overlap, each is either positioned in front of or behind the
other item. The term “stacking order” refers to the front-to-back relationship of the
various items on a page. Stacking order can affect text flow and determine the way
that items display and print.
Each item you create occupies its own level in the stacking order. Every new item you
create becomes the front item. Items can be stacked on a page or on individual layers.
S TA C K I N G I T E M S

On Mac OS, the Item menu includes two commands that let you control item
stacking order. If you press Option while choosing the Item menu, the menu
replaces the two commands with two additional stacking order commands.
On Windows, the Item menu includes four commands that let you control
item stacking order.
• Choose Item & Send to Back to move an item to the back of the page or layer.
• Choose Item & Bring to Front to move an item to the front of the page or layer.
• To move an item one level backward in the page or layer, press Option
and choose Item & Send Backward (Mac OS), or choose Item & Send
Backward (Windows).
• To move an item one level forward in the page or layer, press Option
and choose Item & Bring Forward (Mac OS), or choose Item & Bring
Forward (Windows).

Sending the front, white box one level back by using the Send Backward command (left),
results in a unique geometric pattern (right).

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∫

In a document with layers, the layers themselves are in a particular stacking
order; within each layer, each item has its own relationship to the stacking
order. When you use the Send to Back, Send Backward, Bring to Front, and
Bring Forward commands (Item menu), the stacking order of the items is
altered within the layer. The Send and Bring commands do not move items to
different layers. To rearrange the stacking order of layers or of items on layers,
see chapter 15, “Layers.”
In a Web document, form controls always reside on the bottom layer, so if
you select a form control, Send to Back, Send Backward, Bring to Front
and Bring Forward will be unavailable. W

å

When you move a group using any of the stacking order commands, each
item in the group keeps its front-to-back relationship with every other item
in the group.
In some instances, you may want to change the position of an item in the
stacking order to create special design effects. You can use the Send to Back,
Bring to Front, Send Backward, and Bring Forward commands (Item menu)
to create drop shadows, masks, irregular shapes, and geometric patterns.

Use stacking order to create visual illusions. The two square white boxes placed in front of the
black circle create a cut-out appearance when guides are turned off (View & Hide Guides).

å

To activate an item that is hidden behind other items, select the Item tool e or
the Content tool E and press C+Option+Shift (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Alt+Shift
(Windows) while you click repeatedly at the point where multiple items overlap.
Pressing C+Option+Shift (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Alt+Shift (Windows) while clicking
will successively activate items from the front of the stacking order to the back.
An item that is in front of a text box will cause the text to run around it, unless
its Runaround is set to None (Item menu). To change runaround, see “Running
Text Around Items” in Chapter 10, “Graphics in Typography.”

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Grouping Items

GROUPING ITEMS
QuarkXPress lets you combine multiple items on a page or spread into a single group.
Grouping items is useful when you want to select or move several items simultaneously.
You can move, cut, copy, duplicate, and perform a number of other functions on a
group. For example, you can group all the items that compose a publication masthead;
once grouped, you can modify or move the entire group as you would a single box, line,
or text path.
After you create a group, you can still edit, resize, and reposition individual items while
maintaining the group relationship. You can also place a copy of a group into an open
QuarkXPress library for use in other documents.
GROUPING ITEMS

Items can be grouped when two or more items (lines, boxes, text paths, or other
groups) are active. To select multiple items with the Item tool e or Content
tool E selected, either Shift+click each item or draw a marquee around the
items you want to group. Choose Item & Group (C+G on Mac OS, Ctrl+G on
Windows) to place multiple-selected items into a single group.

Group items using the Group command (Item menu). A dashed border displays around
a group.

You can group groups, and multiple-select a group (or groups) along with
individual boxes, lines, and text paths to create a larger group.
With the Item tool e selected, you can move, cut, copy, paste, duplicate, rotate,
and color a group. With the Content tool E selected, you can manipulate
individual items as you would any ungrouped item.
To move an item within a group, press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) and select
the item with the Content tool E or Item tool e.
å

If an active group contains the same kind of items (for example, all picture
boxes), the Modify dialog box will include a tab (or tabs) that refer specifically
to those items. If an active group contains a variety of items, the Modify dialog
box may display only a Group tab.

RESIZING GROUPED ITEMS

To resize every item in a group simultaneously, click and drag the resize handles.
If you press C+Option+Shift (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Alt+Shift (Windows) while

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resizing a group, all frame widths, line weights, pictures, and text are resized
proportionally. If you press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while resizing a
group, frame widths, pictures, and text are still resized, but not proportionally.
UNGROUPING ITEMS

Choose Item & Ungroup (C+U on Mac OS, Ctrl+U on Windows) to break the
group relationship and let individual items be active and independent.
CONSTRAINING GROUPED ITEMS

You can constrain grouped items when an active group includes a box that
completely contains and is behind all other group items. With the Item tool e
selected, choose Item & Constrain to prevent items in the group from being
resized or moved beyond the edges of the constraining box.

Constrain grouped items by grouping a series of items, including a large box in the back, and
then choosing Item & Constrain. The smaller items cannot be resized or moved beyond the
constraining box boundaries.

å

When manipulating items within a constrained group, you can work very
quickly (with little attention to precision), because items will always align
to the edges of the constraining box.
If you prefer to work with constrained groups, check Auto Constrain (Edit &
Preferences & Preferences & General pane). The Auto Constrain feature automatically makes all the boxes you draw constraining boxes, and all items within
them constrained items. If you check Auto Constrain when no documents are
open, it will become the default setting for all subsequently created documents.

UNCONSTRAINING GROUPED ITEMS

Choose Item & Unconstrain to remove the constraining relationship from the
group and free individual items from the constraining box. Unconstraining
a group does not ungroup it.

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ANCHORING GROUPS P

You anchor a group the same way as you anchor an item. When you anchor a
group, it behaves like a character flowing in text. To anchor a group:

1 Select the Item tool e, then select the group you want to anchor.
2 Choose Edit & Cut (C+X on Mac OS, Ctrl+X on Windows) or Copy (C+C on
Mac OS, Ctrl+C on Windows) to temporarily place the group on the Clipboard.

3 Select the Content tool E and place the Text Insertion bar I where you want
to anchor the group.

4 Choose Edit & Paste (C+V on Mac OS, Ctrl+V on Windows) to anchor the
group at the text insertion point.

5 Adjust the leading of the paragraph containing the anchored group as necessary
to accommodate the anchored item (Style & Leading).
For information about anchoring items, see “Anchoring Boxes and Lines in
Text” in Chapter 10, “Graphics in Typography.”

D U P L I C AT I N G A N D R E P E AT I N G I T E M S
QuarkXPress lets you make single or multiple copies of boxes, lines, and text paths.
Create a single copy of a selected item using the Duplicate command (Item menu).
Create multiple copies of an item and specify the distance between them using the Step
and Repeat command (Item menu). The Step and Repeat feature is useful for
laying out design elements that contain a number of evenly spaced copies of an item.
D U P L I C AT I N G I T E M S

With the Item tool e or Content tool E selected, choose Item & Duplicate
(C+D on Mac OS, Ctrl+D on Windows) to create a copy of the item (and any
contents). Duplicates will be positioned according to the current Horizontal
Offset and Vertical Offset values in the Step and Repeat dialog box
(Item menu).

Choose Item & Duplicate to place an exact copy of an active item (and any contents) on the
current spread. The copy is offset from the original according to the values in the Horizontal
Offset and Vertical Offset fields in the Step and Repeat dialog box (Item menu).

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∫

The preset default offset value for the Duplicate command is .25" for both
the Horizontal Offset and Vertical Offset fields. You can change the default
Duplicate offset values by specifying new values in the Horizontal Offset
and Vertical Offset fields in the Step and Repeat dialog box (Item menu).

D U P L I C AT I N G I T E M S M U LT I P L E T I M E S

Use the Step and Repeat feature to duplicate an active item multiple times,
and in any position you specify. Select the item you want to duplicate with
the Item tool e or Content tool E and:

1 Choose Item & Step and Repeat (C+Option+D on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+D
on Windows).

2 Enter a value in the Repeat Count field to specify the number of copies
you want.

Use the Step and Repeat dialog box (Item & Step and Repeat) to specify a number of
copies. After duplicating an item multiple times, the last duplicate becomes the active item.

3 Enter a value in the Horizontal Offset field to specify the duplicate’s distance
to the left or right of the active item. A negative value places copies to the left
of the original; a positive value places copies to the right of it.

4 Enter a value in the Vertical Offset field to specify the duplicate’s distance above
or below the active item. A negative value places copies above the original;
a positive value places copies below it. Click OK.

Use the Horizontal Offset and Vertical Offset fields (Item & Step and Repeat) to determine
the position of each copy relative to the preceding copy.

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∫

You cannot enter values in the Step and Repeat dialog box that would place an
item outside the current page’s pasteboard. You must either reduce the number
of duplicates in the Repeat Count field, or modify the Horizontal Offset or
Vertical Offset values.
The values entered in the Horizontal Offset and Vertical Offset fields
become the default values and are displayed in the dialog box the next time
you choose Step and Repeat. These values are also applied when you choose
the Duplicate command.

å

You can duplicate and repeat linked text boxes.
Copies of the items created with the Duplicate command are placed in front
of the original. When you use the Step and Repeat command, each successive
copy is placed in front of the preceding copy.
When you duplicate and repeat items within a constraining box, the horizontal or vertical offset values may specify placement of a copy outside of
the constraining box. QuarkXPress will display an alert informing you that
the duplicate cannot be made using the offsets specified.
Step and Repeat offset values are measured from the origin of the preceding
box. For example, if you use the Step and Repeat feature to place copies of a
text box, the position of the first copy is measured from the origin of the original text box (that is, the upper left corner of a nonrotated text box); the position
of the second copy is measured from the origin of the preceding copy; the
position of the third copy is measured from the origin of the second copy, etc.
When duplicating irregularly shaped items, QuarkXPress uses the bounding box
guides to determine where to position the copies.

S PA C I N G A N D A L I G N I N G I T E M S
You can control the position of multiple-selected items relative to one another using
the Space/Align Items dialog box (Item & Space/Align). Items can be aligned,
spaced apart, and evenly distributed in a horizontal direction, vertical direction, or
a combination of both. To space and align items, select two or more items with the
Item tool e or Content tool E and:

1 Choose Item & Space/Align (C+, on Mac OS, Ctrl+, on Windows).
2 Check Horizontal and/or Vertical to specify spacing attributes. Enter values
in the Space fields to specify the amount of horizontal and/or vertical space
you want between active items. Values can be entered as precise distances,
or as percentages.

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Use the Space/Align Items dialog box (Item & Space/Align) to provide options for spacing
multiple items horizontally and vertically.

3 Check Horizontal and click Distribute Evenly to distribute the horizontal
space evenly between the left item and the right item. Check Vertical and click
Distribute Evenly to distribute the vertical space evenly between the top item
and the bottom item. The Distribute Evenly buttons are available only when
three or more items are active.

Irregularly spaced items (left) can be evenly spaced or aligned using the Space/Align
feature (right).

4 Choose an option from the Between pop-up menu to specify the way items are
spaced and aligned in relation to each other.
• Horizontal: Choose Items to distribute space between items, choose Left Edges
to space and align items by their left edges, choose Centers to space and align
items by their horizontal centers, or choose Right Edges to space and align
items by their right edges.
• Vertical: Choose Items to distribute space between items, choose Top Edges
to space and align items by their top edges, choose Centers to space and align
items by their vertical centers, or choose Bottom Edges to space and align
items by their bottom edges.

Choose Centers from the Between pop-up menu to space and align items by their centers
(Item & Space/Align). Enter a value of zero in both the Horizontal and Vertical Space fields
to create an effect like the one shown above.

5 Click Apply to preview your changes; then click OK.

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å

QuarkXPress spaces items relative to the upper active item, which does not
move. The upper item is determined by the location of the item’s top edges.
If two or more items have the same top edges, then QuarkXPress spaces active
items from the left item.
When spacing and aligning irregularly shaped items, QuarkXPress uses the
bounding box guides to determine where to position the items.
When items overlap and Items is selected from the Between pop-up menu
(Item & Space/Align), you can enter a percentage value in the Space field to
move the items in a negative direction. For example, if you have two items
overlapping one another by an inch, and then specify 50% in the Space field,
the items will move –1⁄2 inch.

R O TAT I N G A N D S K E W I N G I T E M S
Rotating an item places the item at a different angle, while skewing reshapes the item
and distorts it. You can rotate items by using the Rotation tool R or by entering precise
values in either the Modify dialog box (Item menu) or the Measurements palette.
You can skew items in bounding boxes (which includes all boxes and any Bézier items).
R O TAT I N G I T E M S

When you use the Rotation tool R, you can manually establish a point of rotation. When you rotate an item by entering a value in either the Modify dialog
box (Item menu) or the Measurements palette, the item’s center point is the
anchored rotation point. You can rotate an active item using:
• The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on
Windows). Enter a value in the Angle field, and click OK.
• The Measurements palette: Enter a value in the r field, and press Return
(Mac OS) or Enter (Windows).
• The Tools palette: Select the Rotation tool R and move the Rotation pointer :
over the item. Click to establish a rotation point; then drag in a circular motion
to rotate the item. The Arrowhead pointer ; and the item’s position will display
as you drag.

Manually rotate items using the Rotation tool R. The Rotation pointer : specifies the point
around which the item rotates.

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To rotate a straight line, choose either Left Point, Midpoint, or Right Point
from the Mode pop-up menu (Modify dialog box or Measurements palette)
to display the Angle field. To rotate a Bézier line, display its bounding box
by unchecking Shape (Item & Edit). For information about line modes, see
Chapter 5, “Line Basics.”
∫

You cannot rotate a box so any part of it ends up outside the pasteboard area.

å

To view the contents of a box or text path as you rotate, select the Rotation
tool R, click the box or text path, then pause momentarily before you drag.
If you drag immediately, you will only see the box or text path outline.
Multiple-selected items behave like a group when you rotate them.
To rotate an anchored box, select the box, enter a value in the r field in the
Measurements palette, and press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows). You
cannot rotate an anchored box using the Rotation tool R.
Mac OS only: You may find that rotating picture boxes containing large pictures
takes longer than you expect. If so, quit QuarkXPress and increase the amount
of memory allocated to QuarkXPress. If you are unfamiliar with allocating
memory, consult the documentation provided with your computer.

SKEWING ITEMS

To skew active items within bounding boxes, choose Item & Modify (C+M on
Mac OS, Ctrl+M on Windows); then click the Box tab. Enter a value in the Skew
field. Positive values slant items to the right; negative values slant them to
the left. Click OK.

Enter a value in the Skew field of the Modify dialog box (Item & Modify & Box tab) to skew
active items within bounding boxes.

∫

You cannot skew straight lines, multiple-selected items, or groups. You can only
skew items in bounding boxes (which includes all boxes and any Bézier items).

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Chapter 7: Document Layout
Whether you produce one small publication or a hundred large ones, understanding
document layout controls will let you achieve more efficient document production
and a smoother workflow.
QuarkXPress offers layout controls such as master page construction and modification,
templates, spreads, page numbering, columns, and other automated features. These
features make it easy to quickly and accurately create professional document layouts.

THE ELEMENTS OF A WEB DOCUMENT W
For the first time, QuarkXPress 5.0 lets you create both print documents and Web
documents. Web documents introduce some new features, such as rollovers, image
maps, meta tags, and forms. Where do you start when building a Web document?
Do you want dynamic elements in your Web documents? If you’re not sure how to
answer these questions, this section may be helpful to you.
W H AT I S A N H T M L F I L E ?

If you’ve used the Internet, you’ve probably seen Web pages displayed in a Web
browser such as Microsoft Internet Explorer or Netscape Navigator. What you
may not know is that the page you see in a Web browser is generated from a
text file containing a series of codes.
The technical name for such text files is HTML files. HTML stands for HyperText
Markup Language. An HTML file consists of the text that makes up a Web page,
formatting codes that indicate how that text should be formatted, and additional codes that point to graphics and other interactive elements.
For example, in HTML, you can make a word display in bold by putting a 
tag before that word and a  tag after it, like this:
HTML makes it easy to create bold text.
When a Web browser reads this line in an HTML file, it reads the  tags and
knows to make the word “bold” appear bold on the screen, like this:
HTML makes it easy to create bold text.

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This is a very simple example of an HTML tag. More complex tags are used to
set the background color of a Web page, control where text is placed, and tell
the browser to display images.
∫

An HTML file is the exported version of your QuarkXPress Web document.

W H AT I S A W E B D O C U M E N T ?

A Web document is a special kind of QuarkXPress document that you can use to
create HTML files. But a Web document is not an HTML document, because it is
not stored in HTML format. To create an HTML version of a Web document, you
must export the Web document as HTML. To export a Web document, see
Chapter 24, “Previewing and Exporting Web Pages.”
When you use QuarkXPress to build your Web pages, you never have to see
HTML codes. You can simply design each page the way you want it to look, and
then export the page as an HTML file; QuarkXPress automatically converts the
page you design into an HTML file.
HOW IS A WEB DOCUMENT DIFFERENT FROM A PRINT DOCUMENT?

A QuarkXPress Web document works a little differently than a QuarkXPress
print document, because HTML has certain strengths and limitations that print
documents don’t have. For example, trapping doesn’t make any sense for a page
designed to be viewed on a monitor, and rollovers don’t make any sense in print
documents because you can’t “roll” your cursor over a piece of paper.
There are other differences. In a print document, you can specify exactly where
you want a text box to be placed, precisely how big it should be, and what
fonts it should use. But attaining that kind of precision is very difficult in a
Web document, because HTML was designed to be flexible. For example, the
concept of “page size” doesn’t really exist in a Web page, because readers can
change the size of their Web browser windows. Also, there’s no way to know
whether readers on the Web have the same fonts you have on your computer.
Even when you’re simply formatting text, there are differences between print
and Web documents. For example, print documents let you control the kerning
(spacing) between two letters with a high degree of precision, but HTML does
not support kerning, so kerning is not available in HTML text boxes. HTML text
boxes do not support some other QuarkXPress features.
Fortunately, QuarkXPress lets you create raster text boxes, which allow you
to preserve print designs in Web documents by converting them to pictures
(see below).

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RASTER TEXT BOXES

A raster text box is a text box for which the Convert to Graphic on Export
box is checked (Item & Modify). When you export a Web document as HTML,
raster text boxes are exported as pictures; that means they don’t change when
you view them in a Web browser. So, for example, if you want a particular headline to appear in the Stone Serif font in everyone’s Web browser, you can check
the Convert to Graphic on Export check box for the box containing that headline. The same is true for any box containing text that you want to appear
“as is”: text on a path, tracked or kerned text, rotated text, you name it.
So why not just export every text box as a raster text box? First, having a lot of
raster text boxes in your HTML file will increase download time, especially with
a slower connection. Users get frustrated with pages that download slowly and
may abandon yours altogether.
Second, text in HTML text boxes can be copied, pasted, viewed with a text-only
browser, searched in a Web browser, and indexed by Web search engines, but
text in raster text boxes cannot be searched, indexed, copied, or pasted as text.
Using HTML text boxes as much as possible increases the usability of your page.
Additionally, raster text boxes are exported at monitor resolution (72 dpi, or dots
per inch). Headlines look great at 72 dpi, but body text may be unreadable.
You may not want to use raster text boxes for everything. But when you
want to make sure users are seeing what you’re designing, raster text boxes
are indispensable.
HTML TEXT BOXES

HTML text boxes are created and manipulated like text boxes in a print
document, with the following differences:
• HTML text boxes must be rectangular. If you draw a nonrectangular text box,
it will be converted to a graphic when you export the Web document.
• HTML text boxes cannot be rotated.
• HTML text boxes can contain columns, but the columns will be converted to
an HTML table when the Web document is exported.
• You can dynamically resize an HTML text box and its text, but only if you resize
it proportionally. You cannot disproportionately resize an HTML text box.
• You cannot use fractional point sizes for text in an HTML text box.

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• If items are placed in front of an HTML text box, and the items exceed the area
of the HTML box, the HTML text box will act as though the runaround of the
items in front were set to None, regardless of their actual runaround settings.
However, if the items placed in front of the HTML text box fall within the area
of the HTML box, the text in the HTML text box will run around the items
(assuming the items have a runaround other than None).
• You cannot link HTML text boxes across pages.
The following features are not available in HTML text boxes:
• Forced or Justified alignment
• Hyphenation and justification specifications (H&Js)
• First Line indentation
• Lock to Baseline Grid
• Tabs
• First Baseline and Inter-Paragraph Max settings
• Baseline Shift
• Kerning and tracking
• Horizontal and Vertical Scale
• Outline, Shadow, Small Caps, Superior, and Word Underline type styles
• Flip Horizontal and Flip Vertical
If you want to use any of these settings in an HTML text box, choose Item &
Modify and check Convert to Graphic on Export to convert the HTML text
box to a raster box.
∫

For information about HTML text boxes and raster boxes, see “HTML Text Boxes
and Raster Text Boxes” in Chapter 9, “Typography.”

HYPERLINKS

You can use hyperlinks to jump to another page, scroll to another part of the
same page, or even download a file. (Hyperlinks can also be used in print documents for navigating in an exported PDF file.)
You can create hyperlinks in QuarkXPress using the Hyperlinks palette and the
image map feature.
To create hyperlinks, see Chapter 20, “Hyperlinks,” and “Working with Image
Maps” in Chapter 21, “Interactive Web Elements.”

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ROLLOVERS

A rollover is a picture in an HTML page that changes when you move the cursor
over it. Rollovers are commonly used as “buttons” that let users link to a
different page or download a file.
While visually impressive, rollovers come with some additional overhead. For
example, you might want to think twice about using a very large image as a
rollover, because large images can take a long time to download over a slow
connection (such as a modem). Also, you should be aware that rollovers are
not supported by all versions of every Web browser (although they are supported by version 3.x and later of both Microsoft Internet Explorer and
Netscape Navigator).
To work with rollovers, see “Working with Rollovers” in Chapter 21, “Interactive
Web Elements.”
IMAGE MAPS

An image map is an HTML feature that lets you link to different URLs by
clicking on different parts of a picture in a Web page.
If you use image maps, you might want to remember that not all Web browsers
display images. Even those that do display images have an option that lets users
turn pictures off for faster browsing. Therefore, if you use an image map as the
main means of navigating through your site, you might want to also supply regular textual hyperlinks for those users whose browsers aren’t set to show images.
To work with image maps, see “Working with Image Maps” in Chapter 21,
“Interactive Web Elements.”
M E TA TA G S

Meta tags contain information about a Web page. They’re not displayed in a
Web browser, but adding meta tags to your Web documents can make it easier
for search engines to index your pages.
If you’re not sure what meta tags to use for your Web pages, you may want to
take a look at the meta tags used by Web sites similar to yours. As mentioned
above, you can view the source code for pages on the Web by choosing View &
Source in most browsers.
To work with meta tags, see “Working with Meta Tags” in Chapter 21,
“Interactive Web Elements.”
FORMS

HTML forms allow users to join mailing lists, purchase products, and send
feedback over the Internet or intranet. Forms can contain text fields, buttons,
check boxes, pop-up menus, and lists; users can use these controls to enter
text, securely submit passwords, and even upload files.

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The most important thing to know about forms is that that they can’t exist
in a void; when you create a form, you must also create a server-based script
or application to processes the data submitted from that form. Such scripts
and applications often, but not always, use the CGI (Common Gateway
Interface) protocol, and may be written in languages such as Perl, C, Java,
and AppleScript. The protocols and languages you can use depend to some
extent on the Web server software and the platform it runs on.
If you would like to use HTML forms as part of your Web site, you will need
to use a third-party tool to build the server-side script or application. For
information about how to approach this task, talk to your Webmaster.
To work with forms, see Chapter 22, “Forms.”
F I L E S C R E AT E D AT E X P O RT

As mentioned before, a Web document doesn’t do you much good until you
export it — but what happens then?
When you export a Web document, a number of files are produced:
• An HTML file is always created. This is the file that you can open in a Web
browser and view as a Web page.
• Picture files are created for all the graphics and raster text boxes in the document. The names of these files are the same as the names of the source pictures
wherever possible; where pictures have been pasted into picture boxes rather
than imported, default names are used. By default, pictures are exported in JPEG
format, but you can override the default settings for any one picture by selecting
it and then choosing Item & Modify & Export tab.
To export a Web document as HTML, see Chapter 24, “Previewing and
Exporting Web Pages.”

W O R K I N G W I T H M A S T E R PA G E S
QuarkXPress lets you create and apply master pages for documents and templates. A
master page is a nonprinting page used to format document pages automatically. When
you insert a document page, it contains all the items on the master page on which it is
based. Master pages typically contain items such as headers, footers, page numbers,
and other design elements that are common to a number of document pages.
C R E AT I N G T H E D E FA U LT M A S T E R PA G E P

When you create a new document, QuarkXPress automatically creates a master
page for it. The original format of the master page and document is determined
by the settings you enter in the New Document dialog box (File & New &
Document). To create the default master page and a new print document:

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1 Choose File & New & Document (C+N on Mac OS, Ctrl+N on Windows).

Specify the format of the default master page and the first page of the document in the
New Document dialog box (File & New & Document).

2 To specify the page size for the document and all its master pages, choose a
page size, or enter values in the Width and Height fields.

3 To specify either portrait or landscape orientation, click an Orientation
icon (Mac OS) or an Orientation button (Windows). Portrait orientation is
the default.

4 To specify nonprinting guides for positioning items, enter values in the
Margin Guides fields.

5 To divide a document along a spine, check Facing Pages. When Facing
Pages is checked, the Left and Right fields for Margin Guides change to
Inside and Outside.

6 To create dividers for columns within the Margin Guides boundaries, enter
values in the Columns and Gutter Width (space between columns) fields.

7 To create an automatic text chain (which is positioned and divided according
to the values in the Margin Guides and Column Guides areas), check Automatic Text Box so that text flows automatically from page to page.

8 Click OK.

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The Document Layout palette (View & Show Document Layout) displays a document
without facing pages vertically (left), and a vertical spine between pages in a document with
facing pages (right). To create a document with facing pages, check Facing Pages in the
New Document dialog box.

å

Master items that are commonly included in master pages are headers, footers,
sidebars, page numbers, and pictures (such as corporate logos or artwork) that
appear throughout the document.
C R E AT I N G T H E D E FA U LT M A S T E R PA G E W

When you create a new document, QuarkXPress automatically creates a
master page for it. The original format of the master page and document is
determined by the settings you enter in the New Web Document dialog
box (File & New & Web Document). To create the default master page
and a new Web document:
1 Choose File & New & Web Document (C+Option+Shift+N on Mac OS,
Ctrl+Alt+Shift+N on Windows).

Specify the format of the default master page and the first page of the document in the
New Web Document dialog box (File & New & Web Document).

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2 To specify default colors for text, the page background, hyperlinks, visited
hyperlinks, and active hyperlinks, choose options from the pop-up menus in
the Colors area. You can choose an existing color or choose Other and then
select a new color.

3 To specify the position of the page width reference guide, choose an option
from the Page Width pop-up menu or enter a value in the Page Width field.

4 To make the page a variable width page, check Variable Width Page and then
enter a percentage in the Width field and a minimum page width, in pixels,
in the Minimum field.
å

In a variable width page, variable width text boxes will “stretch” when the
reader widens or narrows the browser window, as long as the width of the
browser window is greater than the value in the Minimum field. (To make a
variable width text box, select a text box and choose Item & Modify. In the
Text tab, check Make Variable Width.)

5 To specify a background picture for the page, check Background Image, then
click Select (Mac OS) or Browse (Windows) and locate the picture file. Finally,
choose an option from the Repeat pop-up menu:
• Choose Tile to continually repeat the graphic both horizontally and vertically.
• Choose Horizontal to continually repeat the graphic horizontally, but
not vertically.
• Choose Vertical to continually repeat the graphic vertically, but not horizontally.
• Choose None to display the graphic only once, in the upper left corner of
the browser window.

6 Click OK.
å

Master items that are commonly included in master pages are headers, footers,
sidebars, page numbers, and pictures (such as corporate logos or artwork) that
appear throughout the document.

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C R E AT I N G N E W M A S T E R PA G E S P

The Document Layout palette (View & Show Document Layout) lets you
create up to 127 master pages. The icons along the top of the palette let you
create, duplicate, and delete master and document pages in the lower two
sections. To create a new master page:

1 Click either the blank nonfacing page 0 or blank facing-page ! icon in the
top row of the Document Layout palette.
The blank facing-page icon ! is available only if you checked Facing Pages
in the New Document dialog box (File & New & Document).

2 Drag the arrow pointer into the master page area (the center section of the
palette); release it when it changes to the + pointer.

Click and drag blank page icons from the top row of the Document Layout palette
(View & Show Document Layout) into the master page area in the center section to
create new master pages.

3 To create a copy of an existing master page, select the master page you want to
copy and click the copy page icon µ (Mac OS) or

(Windows).

C R E AT I N G N E W M A S T E R PA G E S W

The Document Layout palette (View & Show Document Layout) lets you
create up to 127 master pages. The icons along the top of the palette let you
create, duplicate, and delete master and document pages in the lower two
sections. To create a new master page:

1 Click the blank page icon 4 on the top row of the Document Layout palette.

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2 Drag the arrow pointer a into the master page area (the center section of the
palette); release it when it changes to the + pointer.

Click and drag blank page icons from the top row of the Document Layout palette (View &
Show Document Layout) into the master page area in the center to create new master pages.

3 To create a copy of an existing master page, select the master page you want to
copy and click the copy page icon µ (Mac OS) or

(Windows).

N A M I N G M A S T E R PA G E S

When you create a new master page, QuarkXPress automatically names it
(for example, A-Master A or B-Master B). To change the name of a master
page, click its name in the Document Layout palette and enter a new name.
A master page name is divided into two parts, separated by a hyphen. The first
part is restricted to three characters. These characters appear on the document
page icons in the Document Layout palette. The second part lets you give a
master page an identifiable name. For example, you might name one “A-Cover
Page.” If you name a master page without a hyphen, QuarkXPress automatically
inserts one for you. The full name can contain up to 64 characters.
å

If you are creating master pages that will be used in more than one publication,
save the document containing the master pages as a template. Templates may
also include the colors, style sheets, or hyphenation and justification specifications that will be used with the publication.

D E L E T I N G A M A S T E R PA G E

To delete a master page, click its icon in the Document Layout palette; then
click the delete page icon L (Mac OS) or Ö (Windows). If the master page is in
use, an alert will display. You cannot undo a master page deletion. However, you
can revert to a previously saved version of the document.

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When you delete a master page, QuarkXPress automatically deletes unmodified
master items on document pages that were based on the deleted master page.
∫

Print documents only: When you delete a master page, if the master page
contains an automatic text box, and you have not modified the text box on
the document pages, you will lose all your text.
Master page items that are modified (for example, resized or moved) are retained
or deleted according to the setting in the Master Page Items area in the General
pane of the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences). When
you choose Keep Changes, modified master page items on document pages are
not deleted. When you choose Delete Changes, both modified and unmodified
master page items are deleted.
D I S P L AY I N G M A S T E R PA G E S

You can view a master page from the Document Layout palette, the Page
menu, the go-to-page pop-up menu in the document window, or by using
keyboard commands.
• Document Layout palette: Choose View & Show Document Layout
(F10 on Mac OS, F4 on Windows). Double-click the icon of the master page
you want to view. When you double-click a master page icon, that page
is displayed. To return to a document page, double-click its icon in the
Document Layout palette.
If a master page icon is not visible in the Document Layout palette, scroll
through the master page area or drag the palette divider that separates the
master page and document page areas.

Click and drag the palette divider down to create more room in the master page area of the
Document Layout palette (View & Show Document Layout).

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• Page menu: Choose Page & Display. From the Display submenu, choose the
master page you want to view. To return to the document page, choose Page &
Display & Document.
• Go-to-page pop-up menu: Click the page pop-up arrow in the lower left corner
of the document window to display the go-to-page pop-up menu. Drag to
choose master pages (on the left) and document pages (on the right).

Click the page pop-up arrow in the lower left corner of the document window to display page
icons for a document; choose a master page to view from the pop-up menu.

• Extended keyboard: Press Shift+F10 (Mac OS) or Shift+F4 (Windows) to
switch viewing between the document and master pages. Pressing Option+F10
(Mac OS) or Ctrl+Shift+F4 (Windows) displays the next master page, and
pressing Option+Shift+F10 (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Shift+F3 (Windows) displays
the previous master page in the list.
å

Print documents only: If you have facing pages selected, and the document
view is Fit in Window, you might only see the left or right side of the master
pages. Press Option (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while you choose View &
Fit in Window to view the entire spread.
Print documents only: A facing-page master page consists of two pages: a left page
and a right page. If changes are not appearing on document pages, make sure
you have applied the desired master items to both the left and right master page.

A R R A N G I N G M A S T E R PA G E S

You can rearrange master pages to place more commonly used master pages
at the top of the Document Layout palette. To rearrange the order in which
master page icons display:

1 Click the master page icon and drag it up or down within the master page area
of the Document Layout palette.

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2 Release the mouse button when the down pointer + displays in the position
where you want the master page.

Drag master pages up and down to rearrange them in the Document Layout palette (View &
Show Document Layout).

F O R M AT T I N G A N D A P P LY I N G M A S T E R PA G E S
You design master pages the same way you design document pages. Once all the
contents of a master page are established, you can add pages to a document that is
based on those master pages. You can also change the format of a document page
by changing the master page applied to it.
F O R M AT T I N G A M A S T E R PA G E

A master item is any item included on a master page. Adding master items is
performed the same way as adding items to a document page. To add master
items to a master page:

1 Display a master page (Page & Display).
2 Create master items (or retrieve the items from a library) that you want to
appear on document pages. Text can be added to any box, except the automatic
text box on a master page (print documents only).

3 Return to a document page. The master item formatting will be applied to all
document pages based on that master page.

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I N S E RT I N G N E W D O C U M E N T PA G E S B A S E D O N E X I S T I N G
M A S T E R PA G E S P

To insert a new document page based on an existing master page using the
Document Layout palette:

1 Click and drag a master page icon from the master page area into the document
page area.

2 Release the mouse button when the pointer (+, -, _, 4, 1, or 2) displays in the
position for the new page.
While dragging page icons in the Document Layout palette, icons will display
when the addition of the pages will affect the position of existing pages: Force
Down +, Force Left -, and Force Right _.
When page position won’t be affected, three page icons can display. If the
document does not have facing pages, the 4 icon displays. In a document
with facing pages, the left page icon 2 and the right page icon 1 display,
depending on which side of the spine the pages are placed.
I N S E RT I N G N E W D O C U M E N T PA G E S B A S E D O N E X I S T I N G
M A S T E R PA G E S W

To insert a new document page based on an existing master page using the
Document Layout palette:

1 Click and drag a master page icon from the master page area into the document
page area.

2 Release the mouse button when the + pointer or 4 displays in the position for
the new page.
A P P LY I N G A D I F F E R E N T M A S T E R PA G E T O A D O C U M E N T PA G E

To apply a different master page to an existing document page, drag a master
page icon on top of a document page icon to format a single page.
To quickly apply a master page to a range of pages, select the pages and press
Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) while clicking a master page icon.
• To select a range of sequential pages, click to select the first page, then press
Shift while clicking the last page in the range.
• To select a range of nonsequential pages, press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows)
while clicking each page.

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å

Print documents only: You can use the Document Setup dialog box (File menu)
to change a document without facing pages to a document with facing pages
(and vice versa). To change from a document without facing pages to a document with facing pages, choose File & Document Setup and check Facing
Pages. Then use the 3 icon in the Document Layout palette to create facingpage master pages. To change a document with facing pages to a nonfacing-page
document, first change any facing-page master pages to nonfacing master pages
by dragging the 4 icon on top of them (all formatting on associated document
pages will be lost). Then choose File & Document Setup and uncheck
Facing Pages.

KEEPING OR DELETING CHANGES TO MASTER ITEMS ON
D O C U M E N T PA G E S

When you apply a new or modified master page to a document page, you
can control how the document pages are updated using the Master Page
Items area in the General pane of the Preferences dialog box (Edit &
Preferences & Preferences).
• To keep master item changes: Choose Keep Changes from the Master Page
Items area. When you choose this, master page items modified on document
pages are not deleted. However, the new master page items, including text and
picture boxes, may overlay the modified items on the document page. For
example, if you modified the size of a corporate logo on a document page, and
reapplied the master page that page was based on, you would end up with two
logos on that page.
• To delete changes: Choose Delete Changes in the Master Page Items area.
When you choose this, both modified and unmodified master page items are
deleted and replaced by the new master page items.
If you add, modify, or delete a master page item on a master page, the changes
you make are automatically applied to document pages based on that master
page. However, if you edit items on document pages that were placed by a
master page, those items will not be updated. For example, you might place a
header on a master page, then edit the header text on each document page.
If you then change the header text on the master page, the change will not
be reflected on associated document pages.

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MODIFYING MASTER GUIDES P

To modify the margin or column guides for a master page:

1 Display a master page in the document window by choosing one from the
Display submenu (Page & Display).

2 Choose Page & Master Guides.

Adjust Margin Guides or Column Guides using the Master Guides dialog box (Page &
Master Guides) when a master page is displayed.

3 To modify the column guides, enter new values in the Columns and Gutter
Width fields.

4 To reposition margin guides, enter new values in the Top, Bottom, Left,
and Right fields in the Margin Guides area.

5 Click OK to close the Master Guides dialog box.
6 Choose Page & Display & Document to return to the document.
∫

When Facing Pages is checked in the New Document dialog box, the Left
and Right fields in the Margin Guides area change to Inside and Outside.
The inside margin is along the document’s spine; the outside margin is
along the outside edges of the left- and right-facing pages.
If the automatic text box touches the margin guides, the automatic text box
will be resized when you change the Master Guides.

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C H A N G I N G PA G E S I Z E A N D FA C I N G - PA G E S S TAT U S P
When you create a document, you define the document’s size, the position of its
margin guides and column guides, whether it is a document with facing pages, and
whether it contains an automatic text box. These are document attributes. You can
use the Document Setup dialog box (File menu) to change a document’s page size
and whether it has facing pages. After you change these document attributes, you
may need to reposition items.
USING DOCUMENT SETUP P

To change document attributes:

1 Choose File & Document Setup (C+Option+Shift+P on Mac OS,
Ctrl+Alt+Shift+P on Windows). (The Document Setup command is not
available when a master page is displayed in the document window.)

Adjust a document’s page size and whether it has facing pages using the Document Setup
dialog box (File menu).

2 To change a document’s page size, choose a different predefined page size from
the Page Size pop-up menu, or enter values in the Width or Height fields.

3 To specify either portrait or landscape orientation, click an Orientation
icon (Mac OS) or an Orientation button (Windows). Portrait orientation is
the default.

4 To change a document without facing pages to a document with facing pages,
check Facing Pages. To change a document with facing pages to document
without facing pages, uncheck Facing Pages.

5 Click OK.

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∫

If Facing Pages is checked but unavailable in the Document Setup dialog box,
the document contains facing-page master pages. To change from a document
with facing pages to a document without facing pages, first change any facingpage master pages to nonfacing master pages by dragging the 4 icon on top of
them in the Document Layout palette (all formatting on associated document
pages will be lost). Then choose File & Document Setup and uncheck
Facing Pages.
R E P O S I T I O N I N G PA G E I T E M S P

When you change a document’s page size, items retain their position relative
to the upper left corner of the page. If you decrease the page size to the point
where an item no longer fits entirely within a document page, the item will
extend onto the pasteboard. You may need to reposition some page items after
resizing a document. You cannot reduce a document’s page size to the point
that items won’t fit on the pasteboard.

S E T T I N G PA G E P R O P E R T I E S W
A QuarkXPress Web document may contain a number of pages, each of which will be
exported as a separate HTML file. You can control the attributes of each page, including
its title, meta tag set, link colors, width, and background, all from the Page Properties
dialog box.
∫

To update the page properties for every page in the active QuarkXPress Web
document, choose Page & Display and select a master page from the list.
Then, choose Page & Master Page Properties and make the desired changes.
Changes will be applied to all document pages based on that master page.
To set page properties for the current page of the active QuarkXPress
Web document:

1 Choose Page & Page Properties. The Page Properties dialog box displays.

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Use the Page Properties dialog box to set the properties of the current page of the active
QuarkXPress Web document.

2 To specify the title of the page as it will be displayed in the title bar of a Web
browser, enter a title in the Title field.

3 To specify the name of the page that will be created when the page is exported
as HTML, enter a name in the Export File Name field.

4 To specify a set of meta tags to be exported with the current page, choose an
option from the Meta Tag Set pop-up menu. To create or import meta tag
sets for the current document, see “Working with Meta Tags” in Chapter 21,
“Interactive Web Elements.”

5 To specify a background color, choose an option from the Background
pop-up menu.

6 To specify the colors of text links, choose colors from the following three menus:
• Choose a color from the Link pop-up menu to specify the color of links to URLs
that a user has not yet visited.
• Choose a color from the Visited Link pop-up menu to specify the color of links
to URLs that a user has already visited.
• Choose a color from the Active Link pop-up menu to specify the color of links
that the user is clicking.

7 To specify the position of the page width guide, choose an option from the
Page Width pop-up menu or enter a value in the Page Width field.

8 To make the page a variable width page, check Variable Width Page and
then enter a percentage in the Width field and a minimum page width in
the Minimum field.

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å

In a variable width page, variable width text boxes will “stretch” when the end
user widens or narrows the browser window, as long as the width of the browser
window is greater than the value in the Minimum field. (To make a variable
width text box, select a text box and choose Item & Modify. In the Text tab,
check Make Variable Width.)

9 To specify a background picture for the page, first check Background Image.
Then either enter the path to and name of the picture file in the Background
Image field, or use the Select (Mac OS) or Browse (Windows) button to locate
the picture file. Choose an option from the Repeat pop-up menu:
• Choose Tile to continually repeat the graphic both horizontally and vertically
• Choose Horizontal to continually repeat the graphic horizontally, but
not vertically
• Choose Vertical to continually repeat the graphic vertically, but not horizontally
• Choose None to display the graphic only once, in the upper left corner of the
browser window

10 Click OK.

C R E AT I N G M U LT I PA G E S P R E A D S P
The traditional graphic arts or publishing term “spread” refers to facing pages in a
publication such as a book or magazine. Spreads are usually designed so that the layouts of facing pages complement each other. Publications like brochures commonly
have layouts based on multiple pages arranged side by side.
In QuarkXPress, the term “spread” refers to any two or more sequential pages arranged
horizontally in a document. When you insert pages in a document with facing pages,
QuarkXPress automatically arranges them in spreads.
∫

Spreads are not available in Web documents.

C R E AT I N G M U LT I PA G E S P R E A D S I N D O C U M E N T S W I T H O U T
FA C I N G PA G E S P

To create a multipage, nonfacing-page spread:

1 Choose View & Show Document Layout (F10 on Mac OS, F4 on Windows).
Using the Document Layout palette, you can arrange pages side by side in
horizontal rows. You can also arrange single pages one above the other in the
palette, or you can create a document that contains both single pages and
multipage spreads.

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2 Click the blank nonfacing page icon or a master page icon and drag the pointer
where you want to insert a page. The single-sided pointer 4 is displayed if the
new page will not affect the position of existing pages. If existing pages will be
affected, the pointer changes to one of two icons (_ or +), indicating where the
existing pages will be forced to move.

Use the Document Layout palette to drag blank pages or master page icons and create multipage documents with facing pages. The Force Right pointer _ shows that the new page will
be placed between pages 3 and 4.

3 Release the mouse button when the page is positioned correctly.
C R E AT I N G M U LT I PA G E S P R E A D S I N D O C U M E N T S W I T H
FA C I N G PA G E S P

When you create a new document and check Facing Pages in the New
Document dialog box (File & New & Document), QuarkXPress arranges
automatically inserted pages on alternate sides of the spine. The Document
Layout palette displays a center vertical line between facing pages that
indicates the document’s spine.
To create a facing-page spread with two or more pages on the same side of
the spine for layouts such as foldout sections:

1 Choose View & Show Document Layout (F10 on Mac OS, F4 on Windows).
2 To create a facing-page spread, click a blank page or master page icon in the
top area of the Document Layout palette.

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3 Drag the pointer to where you want to insert a page. The pointer changes to one
of six icons (1, 2, 4, -, _, or +) depending on the page’s placement.
If the -, _, or + pointer displays when you insert a page, other pages will be
rearranged (repositioned, reformatted, and renumbered) to maintain the proper
left/right facing-page layout.

Create multipage facing-page spreads by dragging blank page or master page icons into
the lower portion of the Document Layout palette (View & Show Document Layout).

4 Release the mouse button when the page is positioned correctly.
∫

If you have created a spread, QuarkXPress will attempt to copy the spread when
pages are inserted. For example, if pages 3–5 are positioned as a spread and you
insert six pages after page 5, QuarkXPress will position the new pages as two
three-page spreads of pages 6–8 and 9–11.
R E A R R A N G I N G PA G E S P

When you insert, delete, or move pages in a document with facing pages
and the Force Left -, Force Right _, or Force Down + pointer is displayed,
QuarkXPress will reposition and reformat pages, if necessary, to maintain
the proper left and right relationship. For example, inserting a single page
can move the pages thereafter from left-facing to right-facing, and vice
versa, throughout the document. This is called rearranging.
Rearranging begins from the point where pages are inserted, deleted, or moved,
and continues through the document until one of three conditions occurs: (1) two
or more pages are on the same side of the spine; (2) a single page is in a facing-page
spread; or (3) a section start is encountered.
å

The number of pages you can insert in a spread is limited to the 48" document width. The Document Layout palette will prevent you from exceeding
the limit.

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Numbering Pages and Sectioning Documents

N U M B E R I N G PA G E S A N D S E C T I O N I N G D O C U M E N T S
QuarkXPress lets you automatically number pages. You can also create individually
numbered sections within a print document and specify the way pages in each section
are numbered.
U S I N G A U T O M AT I C PA G E N U M B E R I N G

In QuarkXPress, page numbers can be automatically inserted on document
pages by placing a control character on a master page. To insert an automatic
page number:

1 Display a master page in the document window by choosing one from the
Display submenu (Page & Display); then create a text box where you want a
page number to appear. Remember, the automatic text box on a master page
cannot contain text.

2 Press C+3 (Mac OS) or Ctrl+3 (Windows). This enters the Current Page Number
character <#>. Document pages based on that master page will display the
current page number in the location where you place the Current Page
Number character.

3 Select the Current Page Number character <#> and specify the desired
character attributes.
å

Print documents only: If you use automatic page numbering in a facing-page layout, QuarkXPress will correctly number your left and right pages as even and
odd pages, respectively.
C R E AT I N G A D O C U M E N T S E C T I O N P

A document section is a group of sequentially numbered pages. For example,
an appendix could be a section in a document. To specify a document page as
the beginning of a section:

1 Make sure the desired document page is displayed. The page number area in
the lower left corner of the document window indicates the current page.
In the Document Layout palette, the number of the current page
displays outlined.

2 Choose Page & Section.

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3 Check Section Start; the controls in the Page Numbering area become
available. The current page becomes the first page of the new section.

4 To specify the characters used as a prefix for automatic page numbers, enter up
to four characters in the Prefix field. For example, you might precede the page
numbering in a document’s Appendix with App-.

5 To specify the beginning number for the section, enter a number in the
Number field.

6 To specify the format used for automatic page numbers in the section, choose
one of the options from the Format pop-up menu: Arabic numerals 1, 2, 3, 4;
uppercase Roman numerals I, II, III, IV; lowercase Roman numerals i, ii, iii, iv;
uppercase alphabetic A, B, C, D; or lowercase alphabetic a, b, c, d characters.

Specify the beginning of a document section and the numbering format in the Section
dialog box (Page & Section).

7 Click OK to create the section and format automatic page numbers as specified.
å

To display the Section dialog box, select a page in the Document Layout
palette; then click the page number area in the bottom left corner.

I N S E R T I N G , D E L E T I N G , A N D M O V I N G PA G E S
QuarkXPress lets you insert, delete, and move document pages by using commands in
the Page menu or by dragging page icons in the Document Layout palette. You can
also move pages in Thumbnails view.
I N S E RT I N G D O C U M E N T PA G E S P

To insert new document pages:

1 Choose Page & Insert.

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Specify the format and placement of inserted pages using the Insert Pages dialog box
(Page & Insert).

2 To specify the number of pages to add, enter a value in the Insert page(s) field.
3 To specify where to place inserted pages, click before page or after page and
enter a page number in the field, or click at end of document.

4 If you want the inserted pages to be part of the current text chain, click Link to
Current Text Chain. The Link to Current Text Chain option is available only
when a text box on the page that precedes the inserted page is active, and you
select a master page with an automatic text box.

5 Choose a master page from the Master Page pop-up menu to apply its formatting to the inserted pages. For information about text chains, see “Inserting
Pages for Text Overflow” in “Working with Text Chains” later in this chapter.

6 Click OK to insert the pages. The maximum number of pages you can insert at
one time is 100.
I N S E RT I N G D O C U M E N T PA G E S W

To insert new document pages:

1 Choose Page & Insert.

Specify the format and placement of inserted pages using the Insert Pages dialog box
(Page & Insert).

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2 To specify the number of pages to add, enter a value in the Insert page(s) field.
3 To specify where to place inserted pages, click before page or after page and
enter a page number in the field, or click at end of document.

4 Choose a master page from the Master Page pop-up menu to apply its formatting to the inserted pages.

5 Click OK to insert the pages. The maximum number of pages you can insert at
one time is 100.
D E L E T I N G D O C U M E N T PA G E S

To delete document pages:

1 Choose Page & Delete.

Delete a page or a range of pages using the Delete Pages dialog box (Page & Delete).

2 To delete a single page, enter the page number in the first field.
To delete a range of pages, enter the first page number in the Delete page(s)
field. Enter the number of the last page in the range in the thru field.

3 Click OK to delete the pages.
∫

Print documents only: If Auto Page Insertion is enabled in the General pane of
the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences) when you
delete pages, QuarkXPress automatically replaces the deleted pages as needed to
contain overflow text. The layout of the inserted pages is based on the master
page applied to the preceding page in the document.

å

Print documents only: When QuarkXPress deletes pages that contain text boxes
with links to pages that are not being deleted, it will reflow the text from the
deleted boxes through the remaining linked boxes.
Print documents only: When you delete pages, remaining pages are automatically
renumbered within each section.
Print documents only: If a blank page cannot be deleted, it may be linked to the
previous page. Delete all spaces, paragraph returns, or other invisible characters
on the blank page and try to delete the blank page again. (To view invisible
characters, choose View & Show Invisibles.)

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M O V I N G D O C U M E N T PA G E S

When you move pages, QuarkXPress renumbers them. For example, if you move
page 3 to a position before pages 1 and 2, the original page 3 becomes the new
page 1, while the original pages 1 and 2 become pages 2 and 3, respectively.
QuarkXPress does not change links between text boxes, so a story in a print
document that previously began on page 1 now begins on page 2.
MOVING PAGES USING THE MOVE PAGES DIALOG BOX

To move document pages using the Move Pages dialog box:

1 Choose Page & Move.

Use the Move Pages dialog box (Page & Move) to move a page or a range of pages.

2 To move a single document page, enter the document page number in the
Move page(s) field.
To move a range of pages, enter the first number in the Move page(s) field.
Enter the number of the last page in the range in the thru field.

3 To specify where to place moved pages, click before page or after page and enter
a page number in the field, or click to end of document.

4 Click OK.
å

In fields that require you to enter page numbers (for example, the Insert Pages,
Delete Pages, and Move Pages dialog boxes), you must enter the complete page
number (including any prefix) or an absolute page number.
An absolute page number reflects a page’s actual position relative to the
first page of a document, regardless of the way the document is numbered
or sectioned. To specify an absolute page number in a dialog box, precede
the number you enter with a plus (+) sign. For example, to display the first
page in a document, enter “+1.”
MOVING DOCUMENT PAGES IN THUMBNAILS VIEW

To move document pages in a document by dragging thumbnail representations
of those pages:

1 Choose View & Thumbnails (Shift+F6); the document window displays a
thumbnail view of document pages.

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2 Click page icons to select them. To move a range of pages, press Shift while
clicking the first and last thumbnail page you want to move. To move nonsequential pages, press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while clicking to
select individual pages.

3 Drag the thumbnails to new locations. When you drag a thumbnail page to
a different location, the pointer indicates where the page will be inserted
and the way in which adjoining pages will be affected.
• Print documents only: A page icon pointer (4, 1, or 2) indicates that inserting
the page at that location will not affect existing document pages. The Force Left
pointer - indicates that the existing pages in the spread will be forced to the left.
The Force Right pointer _ indicates that existing pages in the spread will be
forced to the right.

∫

Web documents will display only the Force Down + pointer; since Web documents do not allow facing pages or spreads, pages can only be placed above or
below existing pages.
• To move a thumbnail page between two spreads, drag the thumbnail and release
the mouse button when the Force Down + pointer displays. Spreads that follow
the inserted pages are forced down.

4 When you are finished moving pages, return the document to a percentage view.

Move a page or range of pages in Thumbnails view (View & Thumbnails).

å

You can change to Thumbnails view by pressing Control+V (Mac OS) or
Ctrl+Alt+V (Windows) to access the view percentage field, entering “thumb”
or “t,” and then pressing Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows).

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Working with Text Chains

WORKING WITH TEXT CHAINS
You can control the flow of text through a document by linking text boxes. When you
link two or more text boxes, you create a text chain. In QuarkXPress, text contained in
a single text chain is called a story. When you add or edit the text in one of the boxes
in the chain, the story reflows through the rest of the chain.
You can establish two types of text chains: a single automatic text chain or manual
text chains. Manual text chains are often used in magazines, newspapers, or newsletters, where a story jumps among pages. Text in an automatic text chain flows through
automatic text boxes, which you can specify when you create a new document or edit a
master page. Automatic text chains are useful for documents that contain a single story,
such as a book.
∫

Automatic text chains and automatic page insertion are only available in print
documents. However, you can establish manual text chains in a Web document.
Text boxes in Web documents cannot be linked across pages.
C R E AT I N G A U T O M AT I C T E X T B O X E S F O R A N E W D O C U M E N T P

When you create a new document and check Automatic Text Box,
QuarkXPress creates an automatic text box for the master page and first
document page. Automatic text boxes ensure that you can begin typing
immediately in a new document and that text will automatically flow into
subsequent document pages. The presence of an automatic text box is indicated by an intact chain icon u in the upper left corner of a master page.
To establish automatic text flow when creating a document:

1 Choose File & New & Document (C+N on Mac OS, Ctrl+N on Windows).
2 Check Automatic Text Box. The size and position of this box is determined by
the values in the Margin Guides area.

3 To specify the size and position of the automatic text box, enter values in the
Margin Guide fields.

4 Enter values in the Column Guides area to specify the number of text Columns
and their Gutter Width (space between columns). These settings will be applied
to the document’s first page, as well as to the master page and the pages
based on it.

5 Click OK.
C R E AT I N G A U T O M AT I C T E X T B O X E S O N M A S T E R PA G E S P

Automatic text boxes ensure that text will automatically flow into subsequent
document pages. If the document doesn’t already have an automatic text box,
you can create one. To create an automatic text box on a master page that
doesn’t have one:

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1 Display a master page in the document window by choosing one from the
Display submenu (Page & Display).

2 Create a text box that will be the automatic text box.
3 Select the Linking tool u.
4 Click the broken chain icon U in the upper left corner of the master page;
a marquee (moving dotted line) displays around the icon.

Creating an automatic text box on a master page.

5 Click the text box; the text box becomes marqueed and a Linking Arrow
indicates that automatic text flow has been established.
I N S E RT I N G PA G E S F O R T E X T O V E R F L O W P

The Auto Page Insertion pop-up menu in the General pane of the Preferences
dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences & General pane) lets you
determine whether pages are automatically inserted, and where they will be
placed when you enter or import more text than a text box can display.
Text overflow causes pages to be automatically inserted only if: (1) Auto
Page Insertion is enabled; (2) the master page has an automatic text chain
(as indicated by the intact chain icon u in the upper left corner of the
master page); (3) the overflow is from the text box defined on the master
page as the automatic text box. To enable Auto Page Insertion:

1 Choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences and click the General pane.
2 Choose an option from the Auto Page Insertion pop-up menu.
• Choose End of Story to automatically place inserted pages right after the linked
text box that overflows.
• Choose End of Section to automatically place inserted pages after the last page
of the section.

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• Choose End of Document to automatically place inserted pages after the last
page of the document.
• Choose Off to disable Auto Page Insertion.

3 Click OK.

Specify how pages are automatically inserted using the Auto Page Insertion pop-up menu
in the General pane of the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences).
L I N K I N G PA G E S T O A U T O M AT I C T E X T C H A I N S P

When you insert pages in a document, you choose whether they will link with
the current text chain. To do so:

1 Display the page after which you want to add pages. The page number area in
the lower left corner of the document window indicates the current page.

2 Select its automatic text box.
3 Choose Page & Insert.

Check Link to Current Text Chain in the Insert Pages dialog box (Page & Insert) to flow
text into new document pages.

4 Check Link to Current Text Chain. The Link to Current Text Chain option
is available only when a text box on the page that precedes the inserted page
is active, and you choose a master page with an automatic text box.

5 Choose a master page with an automatic text box from the Master Page
pop-up menu.

6 Click OK.

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E S TA B L I S H I N G M A N U A L T E X T C H A I N S

To link text boxes and create a manual text chain:

1 Select the Linking tool u to add one text box to a chain.
2 Click the text box you want to begin the text chain; it becomes marqueed.

Link boxes together using the Linking u tool. The Linking Arrow indicates that the box on
top is linked to the text box below.

3 Click the text box you want to be second in the chain. After you do this, the
second text box is linked and the Linking tool is automatically deselected.
å

To cut, copy, or paste all the boxes containing a story, select all the boxes at
once. To multiple-select text boxes, press Shift while clicking on the boxes with
the Item tool e.
If you press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) when you select the Linking
tool u, you can add more than one text box to a chain without having to
reselect the Linking tool u after each link. When you have finished adding
boxes to a text chain, deselect the Linking tool u by selecting another tool.

BREAKING TEXT BOX LINKS

To break links between text boxes:

1 Select the Unlinking tool U.
2 Click a text box that is part of a text chain to display the arrow(s) that
indicate links.

3 Click the Unlinking pointer ? on an arrow’s head or tail feathers.
∫

To remove a text box from a text chain of three or more text boxes, and reroute
the links around it, select the Unlinking tool U and press Shift while clicking
the box.

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C R E AT I N G “ C O N T I N U E D ” R E F E R E N C E S P
In newspapers and magazines, you often see “continued on” and “continued from”
references where a story jumps from one page to another. These are called jump lines.
QuarkXPress can automatically place the correct page number with the “continued
on” and “continued from” text in jump lines. When creating a “continued” reference,
you need at least two text boxes for each section of the story. One box will contain
the story, and the other box will contain the reference text. The reference text can be
formatted in any fashion, and can have any wording.

1 Create two or more linked text boxes to contain the story.
2 Create smaller text boxes to contain “continued on page” and “continued from
page” references. Enter the wording you prefer and apply styles to the text.

3 Select the Item tool e; place these boxes within the story text boxes where the
references should go. For example, place the “continued on page” at the bottom
of the first text box and “continued from page” at the top of the next text box.
The boxes containing “continued on” and “continued from” must touch the
text boxes containing the stories. You can also anchor the “continued on” and
“continued from” text boxes if you prefer. To anchor a text box, see “Anchoring
Boxes and Lines in Text” in Chapter 10, “Graphics in Typography.”

Use a combination of overlapping text boxes and keyboard commands to create “continued
on page” and “continued from page” references that update automatically.

4 After the “continued on page” reference, enter the Next Box Page Number
character by pressing C+4 on Mac OS or Ctrl+4 on Windows. The Next Box
Page Number character displays the page number of the next linked box.

5 After the “continued from page” reference, enter the Previous Box Page Number
character by pressing C+2 on Mac OS or Ctrl+2 on Windows. The Previous Box
Page Number character displays the page number of the previous linked box.

6 Move each pair of text boxes to separate pages; the page numbers in the
“continued” references will automatically update.

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∫

 is displayed instead of the page number under the following conditions: (1) If a text box that contains the Previous Box Page Number character or
the Next Box Page Number character does not touch the text box with the
story, or (2) If a text box that contains the Previous Box Page Number character
or the Next Box Page Number character does not touch a linked text box.

å

When “continued on” and “continued from” references are contained in
separate text boxes (grouped within other linked text boxes), editing the
text in a story won’t cause the “continued” references to reflow.
If a story jumps to different pages more than once, you can create a chain of
“continued” references. For example, if your story starts on page 1, is continued to page 17, and ends on page 18, you’ll need two “continued on” and
“continued from” references. To create the additional “continued” references,
follow the same steps used to create the initial references.
Grouping the “continued on” and “continued from” boxes with their respective
stories may make it easier to move each pair of boxes as a unit. To group the
boxes, select the desired boxes and choose Item & Group (C+G on Mac OS,
Ctrl+G on Windows). Grouped boxes remain together when moved to a different location in the document.

WORKING WITH COLUMNS
Columns are vertical divisions of a text box in QuarkXPress. You can place columns
in a new or existing document. You can also adjust the size of columns and the width
between them (the gutter width). Columns are used to divide text boxes for easier
reading, as in a magazine or newspaper article.
C R E AT I N G C O L U M N S F O R N E W D O C U M E N T S P

When you create a new print document and specify the number of columns,
that specification applies to both the default master page and the document
pages based on that master page. To specify the number of columns on the
default master page and the first page of a new document:

1 Choose File & New & Document (C+N on Mac OS, Ctrl+N on Windows).
2 Enter a value in the Columns field.
3 Enter a value in the Gutter Width field to specify the space between columns.
4 Check Automatic Text Box to create an automatic text box with the specified
number of columns on the document page.

5 Click OK.

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å

Specify the number of columns on your page in the Column Guides area of the
New Document dialog box (File menu). If you check Automatic Text Box, the
box will be divided into the specified columns. If you do not check Automatic
Text Box, the page will only show the column guides. The default color for the
column guides is blue.
EDITING COLUMNS IN EXISTING DOCUMENTS P

You can make global changes to Column Guides in existing documents by
editing the Master Guides for any master page. If you change the columns for
an automatic text box that contains text, the text is reflowed automatically. For
information about reflow, see “Modifying Master Guides” in the “Formatting
and Applying Master Pages” section earlier in this chapter.
DIVIDING A TEXT BOX INTO COLUMNS

You can change the number of columns in any text box at any time.
∫

An HTML text box with multiple columns will be converted to an HTML table
at export.

1 Select the text box you want to modify.
2 Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on Windows); then click
the Text tab.

Modify the columns in a text box using the Text tab in the Modify dialog box (Item &
Modify & Text tab).

3 Enter a new value in the Columns field.
4 To modify the amount of space between columns, enter a value in the Gutter
Width field.

5 Click OK. Any text in the box will reflow automatically into the new columns.

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å

To force text to flow into the next column, enter the Next Column character 3
by pressing Enter (Mac OS) or Keypad Enter (Windows). To force text to flow
into the next text box, skipping any columns in between, enter the Next Box
character b by pressing Shift+Enter (Mac OS) or Shift+Keypad Enter (Windows).

Changing a single-column text box (left) to a multiple-column text box (right) causes the text
to reflow automatically.

å

You can also divide any selected text box on a master page into columns using
the Text tab of the Modify dialog box (Item menu) or the Cols field in the
Measurements palette.

C O P Y I N G I T E M S A N D PA G E S B E T W E E N D O C U M E N T S
In QuarkXPress, you can copy items and entire pages between documents by dragging
them. This is useful if you have similar information in two different documents. To
copy items between documents, you simply position two document windows on-screen
and drag items from one to the other. To copy pages between print documents, you must
be in Thumbnails view. The document you are dragging pages from is referred to as
the “source document”; the document you are dragging pages to is referred to as the
“target document.”
COPYING ITEMS BETWEEN DOCUMENTS

You can drag any selected items between documents, as long as they fit within
the target document’s page size and pasteboard.

1 Arrange the documents on-screen so part of each document is showing. The
documents can be displayed in any view except Thumbnails.

2 Display the pages containing the items and the pages that the items will be
moved to.

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3 Select the items to be moved from the source document. Select the Item tool e
and click an item. Or, select the Item tool e or the Content tool E and press
Shift while clicking multiple items.

4 Drag the items from the source document to the target document. Position the
items in the target document. The items should now appear in both documents.
å

Copying items between documents is useful when you occasionally need to
re-use an item. However, if you need to use an item often, it may be more convenient to store it in a library. To create libraries, see Chapter 16, “Libraries.”

DRAGGING THUMBNAILS

To drag pages between documents, both documents must be open. The target
document must have the same page size, or a larger page size, than the source
document. If the pages you want to drag are facing pages, the target document
must have facing pages. If the source document is a document without facing
pages, the target document should not have facing pages either. To drag
thumbnails between documents:

1 On Mac OS, press Option while choosing View & Windows & Tile Documents. This automatically arranges the documents on-screen and displays
them in Thumbnails views.
On Windows, Choose Window & Tile Horizontally or Tile Vertically so
that both document windows are visible, then display each document as
Thumbnails (View & Thumbnails).

2 Select any tool and click the pages you want to move in the source document.
To move a range of pages, click the first page then press Shift while you click the
last page you want to move. To move nonsequential pages, press C (Mac OS) or
Ctrl (Windows) while clicking to select individual pages.

3 Drag the thumbnails to the target document. When you drag a thumbnail page
to a different location, the pointer indicates where the page will be inserted and
the way in which adjoining pages will be affected.
• A page icon pointer (4, 1, or 2) indicates that inserting the page at that location will not affect existing document pages. The Force Left pointer - indicates
that the existing pages in the spread will be forced to the left. The Force Right
pointer _ indicates that existing pages in the spread will be forced to the right.
• To move a thumbnail page between two spreads, drag the thumbnail and release
the mouse button when the Force Down + pointer displays. Spreads that follow
the inserted pages are forced down.

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4 When you’re finished moving pages, return the document to a percentage view.
You cannot edit pages in Thumbnails view. If you need to edit pages in a
reduced view, change the view percentage to a small size such as 10% or 20%.

5 If you dragged thumbnails to recover pages in a damaged document, delete the
blank page that was the original page 1 of the target document (Page & Delete).
This page is no longer needed.
∫

When you drag-copy pages between documents in Thumbnails view, subsequent
pages in the target document are repositioned and renumbered accordingly.
If you drag a page that has linked text boxes, all the text of the story will be
added to the new document. The Text Overflow symbol t will display to show
that this has occurred.

A F F E C T I N G D O C U M E N T D E FA U LT S E T T I N G S A N D P R E F E R E N C E S

When you drag items and pages between documents, certain default settings
and preferences are affected as follows:
• Any style sheets, colors, dashes and stripes, lists, or hyphenation and justification specifications used in any items in the source document are added to
the target document.
If any of the source document’s specifications have the same name as a specification in the target document, the target document specification is used. (For
example, if a color has the same name but is defined differently, the item
will change color from the source document to the target document.)
• If the “XPress Preferences” file used in the source document is different from
the file used in the target document, text reflow may occur.
• When you drag pages between documents, any master pages used on pages in
the source document are added to the target document. If any of the source
document’s master pages have the same name as a master page in the target
document, the master pages from the source document are automatically
renamed. If a master page in the source document is identical in layout to a
master page in the target document, the master page in the target document
is used for any source pages based on the identical source master page.

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DRAGGING DOCUMENTS THAT CONTAIN MULTIPLE LAYERS

If you drag a document that contains multiple layers:
• Items on the Default layer of the source document are placed on the Default
layer of the target document. These items are placed in front of all items
currently residing in the target document’s Default layer.
• All other layers move to the top of the Layers palette list in the target document.
• If the target document contains the same layer name as the source document,
the copied layer has an * (asterisk) symbol placed in front of its name in the
target document’s Layers palette.
• The thumbnail drag functions the same way even when the Layers palette
is hidden.

Duplicate layer names (shown with an asterisk) that were copied from a source document to
a target document.

å

If an item is dragged from one document to another, the item, as well as the
layer it resides in, is copied to the target document.

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Editing Text

Chapter 8: Text Basics
Text is an integral part of nearly every publication. Because each publication requires
different text-handling strategies, QuarkXPress lets you create and edit text directly in
your publications or import text from most popular word processing applications.
In addition to the standard text formatting and editing features, QuarkXPress includes
such features as finding and changing text or attributes, spell checking, custom spelling
dictionaries, and a font usage utility for making document-wide changes to text.

EDITING TEXT
Using the word processing capabilities built into QuarkXPress, you can create text
for your publications without using another application. If you prefer to generate text
using a word processing application, you can import the text into a QuarkXPress document. Regardless of which way you create text, you can use QuarkXPress to edit all
the text in your publications quickly and efficiently.
USING TOOLS

In QuarkXPress, you enter and import text into active text boxes or text paths
using the Content tool E. Characters are entered at the text insertion point,
indicated by the blinking icon i.
• To enter text into a text box or text path, select the Content tool E. Click the
text box or text path to activate it. The blinking text insertion point i indicates
where text you enter or import is placed.
• To move the text insertion point i, click the mouse when the Text Insertion
bar I is at the desired location. You can establish a new text insertion point i
only within text or at the beginning or end of a paragraph; you cannot move
the text insertion point i to another location beyond the last text in the story
or path.
• To select text using the mouse, click the mouse when the Text Insertion bar I
is at the desired location, then drag to select the text you want and release the
mouse button. When a range of text is selected, characters you enter or import
replace the selected range.

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å

When the Content tool E is selected, the Arrow pointer a changes to the Text
Insertion bar I when positioned over an active text box.
Editing text requires moving the text insertion point i within a text box. You
can either move the Text Insertion bar I and click to place the text insertion
point i where you want it, or you can use keyboard commands. The keyboard
commands are explained later in this section.
You can select text using multiple mouse clicks. A double-click selects the word
containing the text insertion point i; a triple-click selects the line containing the
text insertion point i; four clicks selects the entire paragraph containing the text
insertion point i; five clicks selects the entire story.

C O P Y I N G , C U T T I N G , A N D PA S T I N G

Copying, cutting, and pasting text is useful for moving text around in a
document. To copy, cut, or paste text:

1 Select the Content tool E. Select the text you want, then choose Edit & Copy
(C+C on Mac OS, Ctrl+C on Windows) or Cut (C+X on Mac OS, Ctrl+X on
Windows). The text will be placed on the Clipboard.

2 To paste text from the Clipboard into your document, select the Content
tool E. Place the text insertion point i where you want the pasted text to
begin. Choose Edit & Paste (C+V on Mac OS, Ctrl+V on Windows).
å

When you cut or copy text, it is stored on the Clipboard until you replace it
by cutting or copying another text range or item, or until you shut down
your computer.

å

To delete the character before the text insertion point i , press Delete (Mac OS)
or Backspace (Windows). To delete the character following the text insertion
point i, press Shift+Delete (Mac OS) or Delete (Windows). To delete a selected
range of text, press Delete (Mac OS) or Backspace (Windows).
To cut, copy, replace, or delete text, you must first select it. You can select text
with the mouse or by using keyboard commands. The keyboard commands are
explained later in this section.
When you double-click to select a word and cut or copy it, QuarkXPress
looks at the context of the word and adds or deletes a space automatically as
needed when you paste the word in its new location. This behavior is referred
to as Smart Space. If you want an accompanying punctuation mark included
with the word you’re selecting, double-click between the word and its
adjacent punctuation.

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EDITING WITH DRAG AND DROP TEXT

The Drag and Drop Text feature lets you select text and move it with the
mouse. You can drag and drop text only within a text chain, not between
unlinked text boxes. To drag and drop text:

1 Choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences; then click Interactive in the list
on the left to display the Interactive pane. Check the Drag and Drop Text
check box. Click OK.

2 Select the text you want to move or copy.
3 To move selected text, click within the selected range, drag the pointer to a new
location, and release the mouse to drop the text into place.

4 To copy and move selected text, press Shift while clicking within the selected
range, drag the pointer to a new location, and release the mouse to drop the
copied text.
å

Mac OS only: The Drag and Drop Text feature can be enabled temporarily, even
with the preference unchecked. To move selected text, press C+Control while
you drag and drop. To copy and move selected text, press C+Control+Shift
while you drag and drop.

ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS
MAC OS

WINDOWS

FUNCTION

COMMAND

COMMAND

Go to previous character

7

7

Go to next character

8

8

Go to previous line

9

9

Go to next line

0

0

Go to previous word

C+7

Ctrl+7

Go to next word

C+8

Ctrl+8

Go to beginning of paragraph

C+9

Ctrl+9

Go to beginning of
next paragraph

C+0

Ctrl+0

Go to beginning of line

C+Option+7

Ctrl+Alt+7 or Home

Go to end of line

C+Option+8

Ctrl+Alt+8 or End

Go to beginning of story

C+Option+9

Ctrl+Alt+9 or Ctrl+Home

Go to end of story

C+Option+0

Ctrl+Alt+0 or Ctrl+End

Select all the text in a story

C+A

Ctrl+A

Select previous word

C+Shift+7

Ctrl+Shift+7

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ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS
MAC OS

WINDOWS

FUNCTION

COMMAND

COMMAND

Select next word

C+Shift+8

Ctrl+Shift+8

Select text to beginning
of paragraph

C+Shift+9

Ctrl+Shift+9

Select text to end of paragraph

C+Shift+0

Ctrl+Shift+0

Select text to beginning of line

C+Option+
Shift+7

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+7

Select text to end of line

C+Option+
Shift+8

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+8

Select text to beginning
of story

C+Option+
Shift+9

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+9

Select text to end of story

C+Option+
Shift+0

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+0

Cut

C+X

Ctrl+X

Copy

C+C

Ctrl+C

Paste

C+V

Ctrl+V

IMPORTING AND EXPORTING TEXT
QuarkXPress lets you export text in HTML format, and import and export text in a
variety of file formats: ASCII text, XPress Tags, and formats for popular word processing applications. QuarkXPress includes import/export filters for XPress Tags format and
for the leading third-party word processors, such as Microsoft Word and WordPerfect.
(For information about XPress Tags, see “XPress Tags” in the “Appendices.”) To use the
import/export filters, place them in the same folder as your other XTensions software,
and enable them with the XTensions Manager dialog box (Utilities menu).
(For information about XTensions software, see “Using XTensions Software” in
Chapter 1, “Customizing QuarkXPress.”)
I M P O RT I N G T E X T

You can import text in many different formats. If you are importing text from a
word processor or in XPress Tags format, make sure the appropriate import/export
filter is running. To import text:

1 Select the Content tool E.
2 Place the Text Insertion bar I in a text box at the point where you want text to
be inserted. If you want imported text to replace a range of text, select the range
to be replaced.

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3 Choose File & Get Text (C+E on Mac OS, Ctrl+E on Windows), or display the
context menu for the text box and choose Get Text. For information about
context menus, see Chapter 2, “Context Menus,” in A Guide to QuarkXPress:
Interface Overview.

Use the Get Text dialog box (File menu) to import text files.

4 Use the controls in the dialog box to locate the text file you want to import. The
Get Text dialog box lists ASCII files and files from word processors for which an
import/export filter is running.

5 Select the text file in the list. When you select a file, the Type and Size fields
(Mac OS) or the Format and File Size fields (Windows) indicate its format
and size.

6 Check Convert Quotes to convert double hyphens to em dashes, and foot or
inch marks to typesetter’s apostrophes and quotation marks, when the text is
imported. Foot and inch marks are converted to the quotation marks format
you have specified in the Format pop-up menu (Edit & Preferences &
Preferences & Interactive pane & Quotes area).

7 Check Include Style Sheets to import style sheets from a Microsoft Word
or WordPerfect file and add them to the document’s list of style sheets. The
Include Style Sheets feature will also convert XPress Tags code contained
in imported ASCII text to formatted text.

8 Click Open.

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∫

If all the imported text does not fit in the text box, the overflow symbol t
displays. If Auto Page Insertion (Edit & Preferences & Preferences &
General pane) is enabled, pages are inserted (when you import text into an
automatic text box) as necessary to contain the text. P
The import/export filters recognize most of the common formatting functions
in documents that were created in word processing applications. However,
some word processing features that are not available in QuarkXPress will not
be imported.

å

ASCII text does not contain formatting information. However, the XPress Tags
coding system in QuarkXPress makes it possible to include character and
paragraph attribute information in ASCII text. You can use any word processing application that can output ASCII text files to generate text with XPress
Tags code. Then, when you import the ASCII text, QuarkXPress translates the
embedded XPress Tags code and displays formatted text. (For information
about XPress Tags, see “XPress Tags” in the “Appendices.”)
You can quickly format imported ASCII text by specifying character and paragraph attributes at the text insertion point i before you import the text file.
If you are using straight apostrophe and quotation marks to represent English
foot and inch marks, you may need to replace the curly typesetter’s apostrophe
and quotation marks with straight quotation marks. Enter Control+Shift+"
(Mac OS) or Ctrl+Alt+" (Windows) for an inch mark and Control+' (Mac OS)
or Ctrl+' (Windows) for a foot mark.
Use the XTensions Manager dialog box (Utilities menu) to load word processing filters. (For information about XTensions software, see “Using XTensions
Software” in Chapter 1, “Customizing QuarkXPress.”)

E X P O RT I N G T E X T

You can save text created with QuarkXPress in file formats that can be opened
by word processing applications and other applications. To export text:

1 Make sure that the appropriate export filter is active.
2 To save all the text contained in a text box or a chain of linked boxes, select the
text box (or any of the text boxes in a chain). To save only some of the text in a
story, select the range of text you want to save.

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3 Choose File & Save Text (C+Option+E on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+E on Windows), or
display the context menu for the text box and choose Save Text. If you chose
Save Text when a range of text was selected, Selected Text is active. If you did
not select any text, Entire Story is active.

Choose File & Save Text to save selected text or an entire story for exporting, and choose
a format for the saved text in the Format pop-up menu.

4 Choose a file format from the Format pop-up menu. The contents of this menu
can change depending on which import/export filters are running.

5 Enter a name for the file you want to export in the Save text as (Mac OS)
or File name (Windows) field.

6 Use the dialog box controls to specify a location for the exported file. Click Save.
å

The QuarkXPress HTML export feature supports the following text attributes:
• All Caps
• Bold
• Font (Typeface) changes
• Italic
• Strike Thru
• Superscript
• Subscript
• Text Alignment (centered, left, or right)
• Text Color
• Underline

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∫

Quark, Inc. has made every attempt to ensure that the QuarkXPress
import/export filters work with the aforementioned products; however, because
of periodic updating by other manufacturers, we cannot warrant compatibility.

FINDING AND CHANGING TEXT
QuarkXPress lets you find and change text and character attributes within a single
story, on every document page, or on every master page using the Find/Change palette
(C+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+F on Windows).
U S I N G T H E F I N D / C H A N G E F E AT U R E

You can use the Find/Change feature (Edit menu) to search for characters,
words, or phrases, and to replace the text with other characters, words, or
phrases. For example, if you notice that a name is consistently misspelled
throughout a lengthy document, you can use Find/Change to locate and
correct all instances of the misspelled name in a single operation.

1 Place the text insertion point i at the location where you want the search
to begin.

2 Choose Edit & Find/Change (C+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+F on Windows) to specify
search criteria and to begin a search.

3 Enter the text you want to search for in the Find What field. You can enter up
to 80 characters in this field.

Choose Edit & Find Change (C+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+F on Windows) to open the
Find/Change palette and search and replace text and characters.

å

To search for a word when you are unsure of its spelling, you can specify a
“wild card” character in the Find What field by entering C+Shift+? (Mac OS)
or Ctrl+Shift+? (Windows). The character displays as \? in the Find What field.
For example, the Find What entry Analy\?e would find both Analyze and
Analyse. You cannot enter the wild card character in the Change To field.

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4 Enter the text to replace found text in the Change To field. You can enter up
to 80 characters in this field. To delete occurrences of the text in the Find What
field, leave the Change To field blank and click Change.
5 Check Document to find and change text throughout an entire document;
uncheck Document to find and change text only in the active text box or story.
Check Masters when a master page is displayed to search for and replace text
on all master pages.
∫

If Document is checked in the Find/Change palette, QuarkXPress begins a document search at the text insertion point i, and searches all remaining stories of a
document through the last page. To search the entire document, press Option
(Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) to change the Find Next button to Find First.
QuarkXPress does not search master pages during a document search. To find
and change text or character attributes on master pages, you must first display a
master page (Page & Display), and check Masters in the Find/Change palette.
If Document is unchecked in the Find/Change palette and a text box is active,
QuarkXPress begins a story search at the text insertion point i. To search the
entire story, use the keyboard command C+Option+9 (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Alt+9
(Windows) to move the text insertion point i to the beginning of the story
before finding and changing text. Alternatively, you can press Option (Mac OS)
or Alt (Windows) to change the Find Next button to Find First.

6 Check Whole Word when you want the text you enter in the Find What field
to match only when it occurs as an individual word. When Whole Word is not
checked, QuarkXPress searches for all occurrences of the text in the Find What
field, even if the characters are part of other words.

7 Check Ignore Case to search for all uppercase and lowercase variations of the
text in the Find What field. Uncheck Ignore Case to only find exact uppercase
and lowercase matches.

8 Check Ignore Attributes to ignore text attributes. To find and change text
attributes, uncheck Ignore Attributes. (For information about attributes,
see “Finding and Changing Attributes” later in this chapter.)

9 Click Find Next to begin finding text matching the criteria you enter; the first
occurrence of the text in the Find What field following the text insertion
point i is selected.

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10 Click the appropriate button to change the selected text:
• Click Change, then Find to replace the selected occurrence with the text in
the Change To field, and then find the next occurrence of the text in the
Find What field.
• Click Change to replace the selected occurrence with the text in the Change
To field. Click Find Next again to find the next occurrence of the text in the
Find What field.
• Click Change All to replace the selected occurrence and all subsequent occurrences of the text in the Find What field with the text in the Change To field.
A dialog box will display the number of instances changed. Click OK.

å

If you press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows), the Find Next button changes
to Find First. If you then click Find First, QuarkXPress finds the first instance
of the text in the Find What field in the story or document.
Mac OS only: Click the zoom box in the upper right corner of the Find/Change
palette to reduce the palette to half its size and to display more of the document.
This gives you a better view of the document while you search for and replace
text. Click the zoom box again to expand the palette.
The Find/Change controls are in a palette rather than a dialog box, allowing
you to edit documents while the palette remains open. Simply click on the
active document to make changes and temporarily deactivate the Find/Change
palette (which will appear gray). To reactivate Find/Change, click anywhere
on the palette.
Unless you click Change All, you can manually edit items found with
Find/Change at any time. Click the document to make it active when working in the Find/Change palette. After you make the edit, click Find Next to
continue the search from the text insertion point i.

U S I N G T H E F I N D / C H A N G E F E AT U R E W I T H L AY E R S

If you use the Find/Change feature in a document that contains hidden
layers, QuarkXPress searches the hidden layers as well as the visible layers.
If an instance matching the search criteria is found on a hidden layer,
QuarkXPress will display the hidden text box or text path temporarily to
allow you to see the selection and to change it.
For more information about hidden layers, see “Displaying and Selecting Layers”
in Chapter 15, “Layers.”

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FINDING AND CHANGING NONPRINTING CHARACTERS

You can use the Find/Change feature to search for and replace many invisible,
nonprinting characters, such as Tab, Return, and Enter characters, by pressing
special key combinations or by entering a special character combinations.
Nonprinting characters are displayed in the Find What and Change To
fields as follows:

TO SEARCH FOR

MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

D I S P L AY S
IN THE
FIELD AS

Wild card (find only)

C+Shift+?

Ctrl+Shift+?

\?

Tab

\t

\t

\t

New paragraph

C+Return

Ctrl+Enter

\p

New line

C+Shift+
Return

Ctrl+Shift+
Enter

\n

New column

C+Enter

\c

\c

New box

C+Shift+
Enter

\b

\b

Previous box page number

C+2

Ctrl+2

\2

Current box page number

C+3

Ctrl+3

\3

Next box page number

C+4

Ctrl+4

\4

Punctuation space

C+. (period)

Ctrl+. (period)

\.

Flex space

C+Shift+F

Ctrl+Shift+F

\f

Backslash

C+\

Ctrl+\

\\

F I N D I N G A N D C H A N G I N G AT T R I B U T E S
QuarkXPress lets you find and change text and character attributes (font, font size, and
type style) within a single story, on every document page, or on every master page.
F I N D I N G A N D C H A N G I N G AT T R I B U T E S

When you uncheck Ignore Attributes, the Find/Change palette (Edit &
Find/Change) expands to give you additional search-and-replace criteria. With
the expanded palette, you can use the Find/Change feature to change text,
font, font size, and type style, all at the same time. Or you can change any
combination of text or character attributes.

1 Place the text insertion point i at the location where you want the search
to begin.

2 Choose Edit & Find/Change (C+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+F on Windows) to
specify search criteria and to begin a search. For information about Find

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What, Change To, Document, Masters, Whole Word, and Ignore Case
controls in the Find/Change palette, see the preceding section, “Finding
and Changing Text.”

3 Uncheck Ignore Attributes to display the Find/Change character attribute
criteria; the palette expands to display the Text, Style Sheet, Font, Size, Color,
and Type Style fields.

Use the Find/Change palette to change character attributes in a document.

4 Check Text to specify that QuarkXPress should use text as a Find What criterion. Enter the text (up to 80 characters) you want to search for in the Text field.
If you do not check Text, the application does not consider text in the search,
and the Text field is unavailable.
• Check Style Sheet, Font, and Size to specify that QuarkXPress should use these
attributes as Find What criteria. Choose the specific paragraph or character style
sheet, font, and size. If you do not check a selection, the application does not
consider it in the search, and its corresponding pop-up menu is unavailable.
• Check Color to specify that QuarkXPress should use text color as a Find What
criterion. Choose the text color you want to include in the search. If you do not
check Color, the application does not consider text color in the search, and the
Color pop-up menu is unavailable.
• Check Type Style to specify that QuarkXPress should use type style as a Find
What criterion. Specify the attributes you want to include in the search. If you
do not check Type Style, the application does not consider type style in the
search, and the Type Style area is unavailable.
The Type Style buttons in the Find What area have three states: omitted
(white), allowed (gray), and required (black). To omit text of a particular type
style from the search, make sure the appropriate type style icon remains deselected (white). To require a type style to be included in the search, click it twice
to select it; the icon turns black. To allow (but not require) a type style to be
included in the search, click it once; the icon turns gray. Omitted type styles
must be absent to cause a match; required type styles must be present to cause
a match. If a type style is allowed, it does not matter if the attribute is present.

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5 Check Text in the Change To area to replace text in the Find What area with
different text. Enter the replacement text (up to 80 characters) in the Text field.
If you do not check Text, the application does not replace text in the Find What
area with new text, and the Text field is unavailable.
To delete all instances of the text, check Text but do not enter anything in
the field.

Use the Change To area of the Find/Change palette to change found attributes.

• Check Style Sheet, Font, and Size in the Change To area to replace these
attributes with new attributes. Choose a specific paragraph or character style
sheet, font, and size from the pop-up menus. If you do not check a selection,
the application does not replace the found selection with a new selection, and
the selection’s pop-up menu is unavailable.
• Check Color in the Change To area to replace the found text color with a different color. Choose the color from the pop-up menu. If you do not check Color,
the application does not replace the found text color with a new color, and the
Color pop-up menu is unavailable.
• Check Type Style in the Change To area to replace the found type style with
a different type style. Click the attributes you want to include as replacement
type styles. If you do not check Type Style, the application does not replace
the found type style with a new one, and the Type Style area is unavailable.
The Change To Type Style buttons have three states: deselected (white), allowed
(gray), and required (black). Leave a button deselected if you want to strip that
attribute from found text. To allow a type style to remain unchanged in found
text, click once on a button to select it; the icon turns gray. To apply a style to
found text, click twice on a button to select it; the icon turns black.

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6 QuarkXPress replaces occurrences of text or attributes that meet Find What
criteria with the text or attributes you specify as Change To criteria when you
click Change, then Find; Change; or Change All during a search.

7 Click Find Next to begin searching for and replacing text or character attributes
using the criteria you enter. The first occurrence of the text in the Find What
area following the insertion point is selected.

8 Click Change, then Find to replace the selected occurrence with the text or
attributes in the Change To area and then find the next occurrence.
• Click Change to replace the selected occurrence with the text or attributes in
the Change To area. Click Find Next again to find the next occurrence.
• Click Change All to replace the selected occurrence and all subsequent occurrences of the text or attributes in the Find What area with the text or attributes
in the Change To area. An alert will display the number of instances replaced.
Click OK.

å

Unchecking Ignore Attributes allows multiple options. For example, you
could use the Find/Change feature to convert occurrences of the word “bike”
in 18-point Helvetica Bold to ”Bicycle” in 24-point Futura Extra Bold. To do
so, use the fields in the expanded Find/Change palette to define the text and
character attributes that you want QuarkXPress to search for and replace.
The Font pop-up menu in the Find What area lists only those fonts used in the
document. The Font pop-up menu in the Change To area lists all fonts available
to your system.
The following type styles are mutually exclusive: Underline and Word Underline, Small Caps and All Caps, and Superscript and Subscript. Checking one
option unchecks the other. For example, the same text cannot be both superscript and subscript.
Clicking the Plain button in either the Find What or Change To side of the
Find/Change palette unchecks all other type styles.
You can manually edit occurrences found with Find/Change at any time. Click
the document to activate it and edit the text as necessary. After you make a
change, choose Find/Change again and click Find Next to continue the search
from the text insertion point i.

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CHANGING FONTS IN A DOCUMENT
Because knowing which fonts are specified is important when you print,
QuarkXPress includes features that let you list and change all the fonts used in a
document. The Collect For Output (File menu) report lists the font usage information, which is useful when you take your document to a service provider for printing.
The Fonts tab in the Usage dialog box (Utilities menu) lists all the screen fonts and
style variations used on document pages or master pages, allowing you to ensure that
the necessary PostScript fonts are available to print the document correctly. The Fonts
tab also lets you find and change all occurrences of a font. When you use this feature,
QuarkXPress scrolls through the document to display the first occurrence of the font;
you can then replace all occurrences of that font with another.
CHANGING FONTS

To display the fonts used in a document and selectively make document-wide
font changes:

1 Choose Utilities & Usage & Fonts tab.
To display the fonts used on a master page and selectively make font changes,
choose Utilities & Usage & Fonts tab when viewing a master page.

Use the Fonts tab (Utilities & Usage) to replace fonts.

2 Choose a font from the list. All fonts in the document, including the font specified
at the text insertion point i of an empty text box, are listed in the Fonts tab.
To select multiple fonts, press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while you click
each font name. To select a consecutive range of fonts, click the first font name
and press Shift while you click the last font name in the range.

3 Check More Information to display the font characteristics of the selected
font. This information includes the font’s PostScript name, file name, type,
and version.

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4 Click Show First to display the first instance of the font in the document or
master page. Click Show Next to display the next instance of the font.

5 Click Replace to replace the specified font with another font. Choose a font
from the Replacement Font pop-up menu. To replace the font or fonts selected
in the Current Font field list with a plain, bold, or italic version of the font
selected in the Replacement Font field, click the appropriate type style button;
you can simultaneously select bold and italic. Click OK.

Choose a replacement font from the Replace Font dialog box to change fonts within
a document.

6 An alert displays. If you want to replace all instances of the font with the
replacement font, click OK. The font will be replaced throughout the document
or master pages, depending on which is specified.

7 Repeat steps 2–6 to replace other fonts within the document or master
page. Click Done (Mac OS) or Close (Windows) when you finish making
modifications
å

If a font is listed in the Fonts tab (Utilities & Usage) as  preceded by a negative number, the system you are using does not have that font
installed. When this occurs, you can install the necessary font and reopen the
document, or you can use the Usage feature to locate occurrences of the font
and apply a different font.
You may see “missing fonts” or “unknown” messages listed in the Fonts tab
(Utilities & Usage). These messages occasionally display when you work with
documents across platforms because the system you are using may not recognize the same font from the other platform, even when the font has the same
name. To correct this, simply replace the missing or unknown font with the
same font on the system you are using.
When using an Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) picture containing fonts,
QuarkXPress requires both screen and printer fonts (if you are using Type 1 fonts)
or the TrueType font to create the high-resolution output of text contained in the
picture. However, the Usage dialog box does not list fonts contained in imported
EPS pictures; if you are not sure what fonts are used in an EPS picture, open the
picture in its original application to check font usage.

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å

Mac OS only: Whenever a font used in a document is not available on the printer
when printing, a low-resolution version of the font is generated from its screen
information and will be used to represent the characters.
If you open a document that contains characters for which your system does
not have a screen font with the same name or I.D. number, an alert displays.
QuarkXPress uses the default system font to display the characters of the
missing font. You can replace the missing font when the alert displays.

∫

If a font is listed as  in the Fonts list (Utilities & Usage &
Font tab), QuarkXPress is unable to identify that font.
Mac OS only: If the font I.D. number of the font specified in the word processing
document is the same as the I.D. number of a font installed on your computer’s
system, QuarkXPress will apply the font installed on your computer to all occurrences of the text with that font I.D. number. If the font I.D. number of the font
specified in the word processing document is not associated with a font installed
on your computer, QuarkXPress will use the default system font to display the
characters of the missing font. You can use the Usage feature to locate occurrences of an  font and replace it with the font you want to use.

CHECKING SPELLING
QuarkXPress lets you check the spelling of a single word, a selection of text, an active
story, an entire document, or the text on master pages.
CHECKING SPELLING

To check spelling, a copy of the appropriate dictionary file (included with
your QuarkXPress application) must be available in the same folder as the
QuarkXPress application. When you open an auxiliary dictionary for use with
a document, QuarkXPress uses the words it contains in addition to the words
in the application dictionary when it checks spelling. (For information about
creating and using auxiliary dictionaries, see “Using Auxiliary Dictionaries”
later in this chapter.)
CHECKING THE SPELLING OF A WORD

To check the spelling of a word:

1 Place the text insertion point i within or immediately next to the word.

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2 Choose Utilities & Check Spelling & Word (C+L on Mac OS, Ctrl+W
on Windows).

Choose Utilities & Check Spelling & Word to display the Check Word dialog box.

3 In the Check Word dialog box, enter the correct spelling in the Replace with
field or click Look up to check the dictionary file and an open auxiliary dictionary for words similar to the suspect word.

4 To add the word to the open auxiliary dictionary and close the Check Word
dialog box, click Add. The Add button is active when an auxiliary dictionary
is open for use with the document.

5 Click Replace to replace the suspect word with the text in the Replace with
field, or click Done (Mac OS) or Close (Windows) to cancel the spell check.
C H E C K I N G T H E S P E L L I N G O F A S E L E C T I O N O F T E X T , A S T O RY , O R
A DOCUMENT

1 To check the spelling of a:
• Selection of text: Using the Content tool E, select one or more characters,
words, or paragraphs. Choose Utilities & Check Spelling & Selection (C+L on
Mac OS, Ctrl+W on Windows).
• Story: Activate a text box. Choose Utilities & Check Spelling & Story
(C+Option+L on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+W on Windows).
• Document: Choose Utilities & Check Spelling & Document
(C+Option+Shift+L on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+Shift+W on Windows).

Choose Utilities & Check Spelling & Selection, Story, or Document to display the
Word Count dialog box.

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2 The Word Count dialog box displays three fields: Total, Unique, and Suspect.
The Total field displays the number of words checked; the Unique field displays
the number of different words; and the Suspect field displays the number of
words that cannot be found in either the QuarkXPress dictionary or the open
auxiliary dictionary. Click OK in the Word Count dialog box to proceed with
the spell check.

3 Use the Check Selection, Check Story, or Check Document dialog box to view
the suspect words and selectively replace them with words from a dictionary or
words that you enter.

Look up, skip, add, or replace words in the Check Selection, Check Story or Check
Document dialog box.

• The Suspect Word field displays the suspect words one at a time, in the order in
which they were found. The number of times the word is used in the document
is displayed in parentheses after the suspect word.
• Enter the correctly spelled word in the Replace with field to replace the suspect
word, then click Replace. QuarkXPress replaces the current suspect word with
the word you enter, then displays the next suspect word in the Suspect Word
field. When all the suspect words have been displayed, the dialog box closes.

∫

When you click Replace, QuarkXPress replaces all instances of the suspect word.
• Click Look up to check the dictionary file and an open auxiliary dictionary for
words similar to the current suspect word. QuarkXPress lists similar words in the
dialog box. Click the correctly spelled word in the list to enter it in the Replace
with field.
If QuarkXPress is unable to locate any similar words in the dictionary file or
an open auxiliary dictionary when you click Look up, the message “No similar
words found” displays. Proper names and words in other languages often cause
this message to display.

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• Click Add to add the current suspect word to the open auxiliary dictionary.
The Add button is active when an auxiliary dictionary is open for use with
the document.
• Click Skip to proceed to the next suspect word without changing the spelling
of the current one.
• Click Done (Mac OS) or Close (Windows) to stop the spell check and keep any
changes already made.

å

You can spell check master pages by displaying a master page and choosing
Utilities & Check Spelling & Masters.
To obtain the word count for a document, choose Utilities & Check
Spelling & Document. The Word Count dialog box displays; the Total
field displays the total word count for the document. Click Cancel to
return to the document window.

ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS
MAC OS

WINDOWS

S TA RT S P E L L C H E C K

COMMAND

COMMAND

Check Word/Selection

C+L

Ctrl+W

Check Story

C+Option+L

Ctrl+Alt+W

Check Document

C+Option+
Shift+L

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+W

CHECK SPELLING
DIALOG BOX BUTTON

MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Look up

C+L

Alt+L

Skip

C+S

Alt+S

Add

C+A

Alt+A

C H E C K I N G S P E L L I N G W I T H L AY E R S

When spell checking a document or story, QuarkXPress searches all layers in the
document or selected story for misspellings. If questionable spelling is encountered on a hidden layer, QuarkXPress will display the hidden text box or text
path temporarily, to allow you to determine if the word needs to be replaced.
For more information about hidden layers, see “Displaying and Selecting Layers”
in Chapter 15, “Layers.”

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U S I N G A U X I L I A RY D I C T I O N A R I E S
Some documents contain specialized words that are not in the dictionary file that
installs with QuarkXPress. If you need to use such words, you can create your own
auxiliary dictionaries for the specialized words. Auxiliary dictionaries augment the
QuarkXPress dictionary file and make spell checking faster because fewer suspect
words are identified. When you open an auxiliary dictionary for use with an active
document, QuarkXPress uses the words in the auxiliary dictionary in addition to the
120,000 words contained in the QuarkXPress dictionary file. You can make copies
of auxiliary dictionaries and exchange them with other QuarkXPress users.
C R E AT I N G , O P E N I N G , A N D C L O S I N G A U X I L I A RY D I C T I O N A R I E S

To create, open, or close an auxiliary dictionary:

1 Choose Utilities & Auxiliary Dictionary.
• New: Enter a name for the dictionary you create in the New Auxiliary
Dictionary (Mac OS) or File Name (Windows) field. Use the dialog box
controls to select the volume and folder in which you want to save the
auxiliary dictionary. Click New.
• Open: Use the controls in the dialog box to locate the dictionary you want to
open. Select the dictionary and click Open.
• Close: Click Close to close an auxiliary dictionary. When no dictionary is open
for use, the Current Auxiliary Dictionary field displays  and the Close
button is not available.

Create auxiliary dictionaries for unique words (Utilities & Auxiliary Dictionary & New).

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å

Only one auxiliary dictionary at a time can be open for use with a document.
However, the same dictionary can be used with any number of documents.
If you open an auxiliary dictionary when no document is open, the dictionary
you open becomes the default auxiliary dictionary for all subsequently
created documents.
If an auxiliary dictionary is opened for use with a document, it remains associated with that document (even if you save the document to another disk) until
you click Close in the Auxiliary Dictionary dialog box or until you open a
different auxiliary dictionary.
Auxiliary dictionaries are saved as separate files on your hard drive. The path
to the auxiliary dictionary is saved with the document. If you move an open
auxiliary dictionary to another folder or volume, QuarkXPress will be unable
to find it. To check the spelling of a document associated with a missing auxiliary dictionary, choose Utilities & Auxiliary Dictionary, then locate and
open the auxiliary dictionary. If you cannot locate the auxiliary dictionary,
click Close.

A D D I N G W O R D S T O A U X I L I A RY D I C T I O N A R I E S

The Edit Auxiliary feature is available when an auxiliary dictionary is open for
use with the active document or when a default auxiliary dictionary is open.
To add words to an open auxiliary dictionary:

1 Choose Utilities & Edit Auxiliary.
2 Enter the new words you want in the field below the list; click Add after each
word you enter to add it to the dictionary.

3 Click Save when you have finished adding words.
∫

To add words to an open auxiliary dictionary while you are checking the
spelling of a document (Utilities & Check Spelling), click Add in the Check
Word, Check Story, or Check Document dialog box. Pressing Option+Shift
(Mac OS) or Alt+Shift (Windows) while you click Done (Mac OS) or Close
(Windows) adds all suspect words found to the open auxiliary dictionary.
The Add button is available when an auxiliary dictionary is open for use
with the active document.

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Chapter 9: Typography
In text, as in speech, words can be whispered or screamed. Typography is the art of
making the appearance of your text convey the tone or meaning of the content. When
the eye and the mind are engaged in your text, you have achieved typographic success.
QuarkXPress lets you control the tone of your text by letting you adjust every facet of
typography, including typefaces, type styles, leading, and spacing. With these precise
controls, you can make your words roar or murmur.

CONFIRMING TYPOGRAPHIC PREFERENCES P
Typographic preferences affect the way the text flows in a document. If you change
these preferences later in the publishing process, you may face text reflow, so plan
ahead. When you create a new document, confirm that the typographic preferences
meet your needs before you start working with text. Some of these preferences include
customizable type styles, leading control, ligature control, and baseline grid settings.
The preferences that affect typography are in the Character and Paragraph panes
of the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences). For detailed
information about the controls in these panes, see Chapter 4, “Edit Menu,” in
“A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview.”
To confirm typographic preferences:

1 Create or open the document for which you want to confirm typographic
settings. If you want to configure typographic settings for all subsequently
created documents, make sure no documents are open.

2 Choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences. The Preferences dialog
box displays.

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Use the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences) to confirm Paragraph
and Character settings before you start formatting text.

3 Click Paragraph in the list on the left and confirm that the paragraph settings
are the way you want them. Check and change any of the settings to suit your
document, and catch your reader’s attention. In particular, pay attention to the
following settings:
• Leading: If you are using auto leading, be sure to confirm the value in the Auto
Leading field. Unless you are trying to match the line spacing of a document
that originated in a word processing application, choose Typesetting for the
Leading mode. To keep line spacing consistent when lines of text touch the
bottom of obstructing items, such as picture boxes, check Maintain Leading.
• Baseline Grid: If you are planning to lock paragraphs to a baseline grid to
ensure that lines align from column to column, check the settings in the
Baseline Grid area. The value in the Start field specifies the distance from
the top of a page to the first line in the grid. The value in the Increment
field determines the space between lines in the grid.

4 The Method pop-up menu in the Hyphenation area lets you specify the
method QuarkXPress uses to automatically hyphenate paragraphs when there
is no corresponding entry found in your Hyphenation Exceptions dictionary.
The setting you choose affects only paragraphs for which Auto Hyphenation
(Edit & H&Js) is enabled.
• Choose Standard to hyphenate using the algorithm built into versions of
QuarkXPress prior to 3.1. Documents created in versions of QuarkXPress prior
to 3.1 default to Standard when they are opened in version 3.1 or later.
• The Enhanced lets you hyphenate using the algorithm built into QuarkXPress
as of version 3.1.

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• The Expanded uses the same algorithm as the Enhanced option but checks
any built-in hyphenation dictionaries before resorting to the algorithm. This is
the default method for documents created in this version of QuarkXPress.

5 Click Character in the list on the left and confirm that the character settings
are the way you want them. Check and change any of the settings to suit your
document, and catch your reader’s attention. In particular, pay attention to the
following settings:
• Superscript, Subscript, Small Caps, and Superior type styles: You can
customize these type styles on a document-wide basis. Note that superscript
and subscript characters may cause uneven line spacing in paragraphs that
use auto leading.
• Mac OS only: Ligatures: If you want to use the ligatures for “fi” and “fl” that are
contained in many Mac OS fonts, check Ligatures. You can specify a tracking or
kerning value above which characters are not combined into ligatures in the
Break Above field. For example, in a widely spaced headline, you might not
want a ligature. To prevent instances of “ffi” and “ffl” (as in “office” and “ruffle”)
from being combined into ligatures, check Not “ffi” or “ffl.”

∫

Documents created in previous versions of QuarkXPress maintain their hyphenation method (Standard or Enhanced) when opened in a newer version. If you
choose Expanded for these documents, text reflow may occur.

6 After confirming all the preferences, click OK.
å

If you use the same preferences frequently (for example, if you always check
Ligatures), specify typographic preferences when no documents are open.
The new setting will apply to all new documents.

A P P LY I N G C H A R A C T E R AT T R I B U T E S P
QuarkXPress gives you precise control over type, letting you apply styles to text on a
character-by-character basis. Each character can have almost any combination of the
styles available, including font, size, type style, and color. Styles for text, referred to as
character attributes, are applied to selected text, or at the text insertion point i to affect
text entered thereafter.
CHOOSING A FONT

QuarkXPress has access to all the fonts currently installed and available on your
system. You can apply a font choice to selected text or at the text insertion
point i using any of the following options:

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STYLE MENU

Choose Style & Font and choose a font from the submenu.
MEASUREMENTS PALETTE

Click the arrow < next to the current font name and choose a font from the
list. You can also select the current font name in the field, enter the first few
characters of the font name until it is recognized, and press Return (Mac OS)
or Enter (Windows).

Choose a font for selected text from the right side of the Measurements palette.

ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS

You can change fonts quickly while you are typing by pressing
C+Option+Shift+M (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Alt+Shift+M (Windows) to jump directly
to the font field in the Measurements palette. Enter the first few characters of
the font name until it is recognized, press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows),
then continue typing. To choose the next font in the pop-up menu, press
Option+F9 (Mac OS) or Ctrl+F9 (Windows). For the previous font, press
Option+Shift+F9 (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Shift+F9 (Windows).
å

You can group character and paragraph attributes as a style sheet. Using style
sheets helps streamline production and maintain consistent formatting. For
information about using style sheets, see “Working with Style Sheets” later
in this chapter.

CHOOSING A SIZE

QuarkXPress lets you use font sizes from 2 to 720 points. You can apply a
font size to selected text or at the text insertion point i using any of the
following options:
STYLE MENU

Choose Style & Size and choose a point size from the submenu. Alternately,
choose Other (C+Shift+\ on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+\ on Windows) and enter
a value in the Size field. Click OK.
MEASUREMENTS PALETTE

Click the arrow < next to the current font size to display a list of point sizes;
choose a size from the list. You can also select the current font size in the field,
enter a new point size, and press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows).

Choose a size for selected text from the right side of the Measurements palette.

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ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS

QuarkXPress increases or decreases font sizes according to the following preset
range: 7, 9, 10, 12, 14, 18, 24, 36, 48, 60, 72, 96, 120, 144, 168, and 192 points.
MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Increase 1 pt

C+Option+
Shift+>

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+>

Decrease 1 pt

C+Option+
Shift+<

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+<

Increase in preset range

C+Shift+>

Ctrl+Shift+>

Decrease in preset range

C+Shift+<

Ctrl+Shift+<

CHANGE IN FONT SIZE

å

You can resize all the text in a box by pressing modifier keys while dragging
a text box handle.
Press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) to resize the box, point size, auto leading,
and text scaling in proportion to the box dimensions.
Press C+Option+Shift (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Alt+Shift (Windows) to resize the
box, point size, auto leading, and text scaling in proportion to the original
box dimensions.
You cannot use modifier keys to resize text when resizing a linked text box.

CHOOSING TYPE STYLES

Type styles can be applied in almost any combination, such as Bold Italic
Underline. You can apply type styles to selected text or at the text insertion
point i using any of the following options:
STYLE MENU

Choose Style & Type Style and choose a type style from the submenu. To
apply additional styles, choose the Type Style submenu again and make
additional choices.
CHARACTER ATTRIBUTES DIALOG BOX

Choose Style & Character (C+Shift+D on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+D on Windows)
and click check boxes in the Type Style area to specify styles.

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ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS

Click one or more type style icons in the Measurements palette or press the
appropriate keyboard commands.
TYPE STYLE

MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Plain P

C+Shift+P

Ctrl+Shift+P

Bold B

C+Shift+B

Ctrl+Shift+B

Italic I

C+Shift+I

Ctrl+Shift+I

Underline U

C+Shift+U

Ctrl+Shift+U

Word Underline W*

C+Shift+W

Ctrl+Shift+W

Strike Thru ?

C+Shift+/

Ctrl+Shift+/

Outline O*

C+Shift+O

Ctrl+Shift+O

Shadow S*

C+Shift+S

Ctrl+Shift+S

All Caps K

C+Shift+K

Ctrl+Shift+K

Small Caps H*

C+Shift+H

Ctrl+Shift+H

Superscript +

C+Shift+ +

Ctrl+Shift+0

Subscript _

C+Shift+ –

Ctrl+Shift+9

Superior M*

C+Shift+V

Ctrl+Shift+V

* Not available in HTML text boxes.
∫

Some type styles are mutually exclusive and cannot be combined: Underline and
Word Underline, Small Caps and All Caps, and Superscript and Subscript.

å

To remove a type style from selected text, choose the Type Style submenu
option again, click the Measurements palette icon again, or press the keyboard
command again. To remove all styles from selected text, choose Plain. You can
also uncheck style options in the Type Style area in the Character Attributes
dialog box (Style & Character).
You can customize the Superscript, Subscript, Small Caps, and Superior
type styles for a document using the Character pane in the Preferences dialog
box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences & Document & Character pane).
For example, you can make Small Caps characters taller or specify that Subscript characters drop lower.

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CHOOSING A COLOR AND SHADE

QuarkXPress lists all the colors defined for a document — default colors, colors
created in the Colors dialog box (Edit menu), and spot colors imported with
EPS picture files. You can apply a color and shade to selected text or at the text
insertion point i using any of the following options:
STYLE MENU

Choose Style & Color and choose a color from the submenu. Choose Style &
Shade and choose a percentage value from the submenu. Or, choose Style &
Shade & Other and enter a value in the Shade field of the Character Attributes
dialog box (Style & Character). Click OK.
COLORS PALETTE

Choose View & Show Colors (F12). Click the text icon T, then click one of
the colors listed. Click the Shade pop-up arrow < next to the current shade
percentage to display a list of values; choose a percentage from the list. You
can also select the current shade value in the field, enter a new value, and
press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows).

The text icon T and the shade percentage pop-up menu at the top of the Colors palette let
you choose a color and shade for selected text.

å

To create reverse type, use light text in a text box with a dark background.
You can also position reverse type within a rule above or a rule below. For
information about anchored rules, see “Creating Rules Above and Below
Paragraphs” in Chapter 10, “Graphics in Typography.”

A P P LY I N G H O R I Z O N TA L O R V E RT I C A L S C A L E

QuarkXPress lets you condense or expand characters so they are narrower or
wider, and taller or shorter than specified in the original font. You can apply
horizontal/vertical scaling to selected text or at the text insertion point i using
any of the following options:

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STYLE MENU

Choose Style & Horizontal/Vertical Scale. Choose Horizontal or Vertical from
the Scale pop-up menu and enter a value in the field. Click OK.
ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS

The keyboard commands work for both horizontal or vertical scaling. If a range
of text is selected that has both horizontal and vertical scaling applied, the keyboard commands will increase or decrease the text accordingly.
CHANGE IN SCALE

MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Condense 5%

C+[

Ctrl+[

Expand 5%

C+]

Ctrl+]

Condense 1%

C+Option+[

Ctrl+Alt+]

Expand 1%

C+Option+]

Ctrl+Alt+[

This example shows 30-point type scaled 150% vertically (at left), normal (middle), and 150%
horizontally (at right).

∫

You cannot apply horizontal and vertical scaling values simultaneously. When
you apply vertical scaling to horizontally scaled text, the text reverts to a
horizontal scale of 100%. When you apply horizontal scaling to vertically
scaled text, the text reverts to a vertical scale of 100%.

å

Overscaling characters can have an undesirable effect on the font design. You
may want to print samples of scaled text to ensure that none of the strokes are
too thick or too thin.

CHANGING TEXT BASELINES

QuarkXPress lets you place characters above or below their baseline without
affecting paragraph spacing. A positive value raises the text; a negative value
lowers the text. You can apply baseline shift to selected text or at the text
insertion point i using any of the following options:
STYLE MENU

Choose Style & Baseline Shift and enter a value in the Baseline Shift field.
Click OK.

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ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS

Keyboard commands let you shift characters up or down one point.
MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Down 1 pt

C+Option+
Shift+ –

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+9

Up 1 pt

C+Option+
Shift+ +

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+0

SHIFT CHARACTERS

This example shows 24-point type; the Q has a baseline shift value of – 10 points, the X a
value of 10 points.

∫

When you change the size of characters that have a baseline shift applied, the
baseline shift value is automatically increased or decreased proportionally.

A P P LY I N G M U LT I P L E C H A R A C T E R AT T R I B U T E S

You can view and edit all character attributes at one time using the Character
Attributes dialog box. This dialog box combines many Style menu commands
and indicates the style of selected text or new text entered at the text insertion
point i. To quickly specify multiple character attributes:

1 Choose Style & Character (C+Shift+D on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+D on Windows).

Use the Character Attributes dialog box (Style menu) to apply multiple character attributes
in one step.

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2 Choose a font from the Font pop-up menu. You can also select the current font
name in the field and enter the first few characters of the new font name until
it is recognized.

3 Choose a point size from the Size pop-up menu. You can also select the current
font size in the field and enter a new point size.

4 Choose a color from the Color pop-up menu.
5 Choose a color percentage from the Shade pop-up menu. You can also select the
current shade and enter a new percentage value.

6 Choose Horizontal or Vertical from the Scale pop-up menu and enter a percentage value in the Scale field. (Not available in HTML text boxes.)

7 Enter a value in the Track Amount field. (Not available in HTML text boxes.)
If no text is selected, the Track Amount field is replaced by the Kern Amount
field. However, only the current character pair can be kerned. (The current
character pair is the pair the text insertion point i is placed between.) The Kern
Amount field is unavailable if the text insertion point i is at the beginning of a
paragraph. For information about kerning and tracking, see “Specifying Kerning
and Tracking” later in this chapter.

8 Enter a value in the Baseline Shift field. (Not available in HTML text boxes.)
9 Use the check boxes in the Type Style area to apply and remove type styles.
To remove all type styles, check Plain.

10 When you are finished specifying character attributes, click OK.
∫

Blank fields and gray check boxes in the Character Attributes dialog box
indicate that multiple styles are applied to selected text. For example, if the
Font field is blank, then more than one font is applied to the selected text.

å

If you enter a value in a blank field in the Character Attributes dialog box,
that value will be applied to all the selected text. If you check or uncheck a gray
check box, that style setting will be applied to or removed from all selected text.

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SPECIFYING KERNING AND TRACKING
Kerning is the adjustment of space between character pairs. Because of their shapes,
certain character pairs look better when kerned. QuarkXPress can perform kerning
automatically, and you can also use manual kerning controls to specify additional
kerning between characters. Tracking lets you adjust the space between selected
characters and words for copyfitting and typographic effects.
KERNING TEXT

Kerning lets you adjust the amount of space between two characters. Kerning
values are expressed as 1⁄200 of an em space. The em space used for kerning increments is determined by the Standard Em Space setting in the Character pane
of the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preference & Document). Check Standard Em Space for an em space that is equivalent to the
point size of the text (for example, 24-point text has a 24-point em space).
Uncheck Standard Em Space to use the QuarkXPress defined em space,
which is the width of two zeros in a given font. A standard em space is generally smaller than a QuarkXPress em space.

This example shows the effect of –20 (–20⁄200 em) kerning between the “L” and the “a” on the
left, no kerning in the middle, and +20 (20⁄200 em) kerning on the right.

Because kerning is expressed as a fraction of an em space relative to the font and
size of the characters, rather than as an absolute value, kerning adjustments
applied to a character pair will remain proportional if you later change the font
size of the kerned characters.
A positive kerning value increases the amount of space between characters;
a negative value decreases it. When text is selected, the Kern command is
replaced by Track in the Style menu. Kern is not available when the text
insertion point i immediately precedes the first character in a paragraph.
Place the Text Insertion bar I between the two characters you want to kern,
then use any of the following options to apply kerning.
STYLE MENU

Choose Style & Kern and enter a value in the Kern Amount field. Click OK.
MEASUREMENTS PALETTE

Select the kerning field, enter a new value, and press Return (Mac OS) or Enter
(Windows). Alternately, click the kerning icons N to increase or decrease kerning
in 1 ⁄20-em increments. Press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) and click the
icons to kern in 1 ⁄200-em increments.

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To adjust kerning when the text insertion point i is between two characters, click the kerning
icons N in the Measurements palette.

ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS

Keyboard commands let you increase and decrease kerning values in 1 ⁄20-em
and 1 ⁄200-em increments.
CHANGE IN KERNING

MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Decrease 1 ⁄20-em

C+Shift+{

Ctrl+Shift+{

Increase 1 ⁄20-em

C+Shift+}

Ctrl+Shift+}

Decrease ⁄200-em

C+Option+
Shift+}

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+}

Increase 1 ⁄200-em

C+Option+
Shift+}

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+}

1

å

For detailed kerning work, increase your view scale to 400% or 800%. Then,
check the kerning at Actual Size within the context of the entire layout. Be sure
to confirm the kerning on printed output as well.

∫

Kerning is not available in HTML text boxes.

K E R N I N G A U T O M AT I C A L LY

You can specify that QuarkXPress automatically kern text above a specific point
size by using the kerning tables built into most fonts and any kerning tables you
have edited with the Kern-Track Editor (Utilities menu). To specify automatic
kerning for the active document:

1 Choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences, then click Character in the list on
the left to display the Character pane.

Specify automatic kerning using the Auto Kern Above check box and field in the Character
pane of the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences).

2 Check Auto Kern Above.

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3 To specify the point size above which text will be automatically kerned, enter
a value in the field.

4 Click OK.
å

When Auto Kern Above is checked in the Character pane of the Preferences
dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences), auto kerning is applied in
addition to manual kerning if the point size is larger than the value specified.
Manual kerning is always applied whether the check box is checked or not.
Why should you use the Auto Kern Above feature? Because it does a lot of
detailed kerning work for you, and it does so according to the font designer’s
specifications. In general, use automatic kerning and set Auto Kern Above
to 2 or 4 points so that all text is automatically kerned.

E D I T I N G K E R N I N G TA B L E S

When QuarkXPress performs automatic kerning, the program uses kerning
information that is built into the font. This information is stored in the font’s
kerning table. A kerning table contains a number of character pairs — “Ta,” for
example — and an associated kerning value for each pair in the table. When
QuarkXPress displays characters on-screen and prints them, it uses the font’s
kerning table information.
Editing a font’s kerning table reduces the need for extensive manual kerning. To
edit a font’s kerning table, use the Kern-Track Editor QuarkXTensions software
included with QuarkXPress. For information about kerning controls available
through the Kern-Track Editor, see Chapter 9, “Utilities Menu,” in A Guide to
QuarkXPress: Interface Overview.
TRACKING TEXT

Tracking lets you adjust the space between selected characters and words for
copyfitting and special typographic effects. Tracking values are expressed as 1⁄ 200
of an em space. The em space used for tracking increments is determined by the
Standard Em Space setting in the Character pane of the Preferences dialog
box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences). Check Standard Em Space for an em
space that is equivalent to the point size of the text (for example, 24-point text
has a 24-point em space). Uncheck Standard Em Space to use the QuarkXPress
defined em space, which is the width of two zeros in a given font. A standard
em space is generally smaller than a QuarkXPress em space.

This example shows 36-point type tracked + 20 (20⁄200 em) left, and –20 (– 20⁄200 em) right.

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A positive tracking value increases the space to the right of each character; a
negative value decreases it. When no text is selected, Track is replaced by Kern
in the Style menu. Select the text you want to track, then use any of the following options to apply tracking:
STYLE MENU

Choose Style & Track and enter a value in the Track Amount field. Click OK.
MEASUREMENTS PALETTE AND KEYBOARD COMMANDS

Select the tracking field, enter a new value, and press Return (Mac OS) or Enter
(Windows). Alternately, click the tracking icons N to increase or decrease tracking in 1⁄20-em increments. Press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) and click the
icons to track in 1⁄200-em increments.

Click the tracking icons N in the Measurements palette to adjust the tracking of selected text.

ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS

Keyboard commands let you increase and decrease tracking values in 1⁄ 20-em and
1
⁄ 200-em increments.
CHANGE IN TRACKING

MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Decrease 1 ⁄ 20-em

C+Shift+{

Ctrl+Shift+{

Increase ⁄ 20-em

C+Shift+}

Ctrl+Shift+}

Decrease 1 ⁄ 200-em

C+Option+
Shift+{

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+{

Increase 1 ⁄ 200-em

C+Option+
Shift+}

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+}

1

å

Tracking is commonly used for copyfitting — for example, negative tracking is
often used to pull in a word. However, too much tracking can interfere with
design and readability. When you are using tracking for copyfitting, consider
these guidelines: track whole paragraphs rather than one line or one word;
establish guidelines for tracking (for example from +3 to –3); and make sure
vertically adjacent paragraphs have similar tracking applied. These are general
rules; appropriate tracking values depend on the design, font, column width,
and other factors.

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E D I T I N G T R A C K I N G TA B L E S

If you are applying tracking to most of your text, you can save time by editing
the font’s tracking tables. To edit a font’s tracking table, use the Kern-Track
Editor QuarkXTensions software included with QuarkXPress. For information
about tracking controls available through the Kern-Track Editor, see Chapter 9,
“Utilities Menu,” in A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview.

A P P LY I N G PA R A G R A P H AT T R I B U T E S P
QuarkXPress gives you precise control over the spacing of text by specifying paragraph
attributes such as alignment, indents, leading, and tab settings. Paragraph attributes
are applied to the selected paragraph (the paragraph containing the text insertion
point i) or to a range of selected paragraphs through the Paragraph Attributes dialog
box (Style & Formats). Some paragraph attributes can also be applied using the
Measurements palette.
To apply attributes to selected paragraphs:

1 Choose Style & Formats (C+Shift+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+F on Windows).
2 Change any of the settings in the Formats and Tabs tabs. For information
about specific controls in the Paragraph Attributes dialog box, see Chapter 5,
“Style Menu,” in A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview, and the remainder
of this chapter.
• You can enter values in fields using any QuarkXPress supported measurement
system. When you enter a value without specifying a measurement system,
QuarkXPress uses the default measurement system chosen in the Horizontal
Measure or Vertical Measure pop-up menu in the Measurements pane of the
Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences). Leading always
displays in points.
• A blank field in the Paragraph Attributes dialog box or the Measurements
palette indicates that more than one value is specified for the selected paragraphs.

3 If you want to see the effect of the changes, click Apply.
4 Click OK.
å

You can specify paragraph formats when creating style sheets. This lets you
quickly apply a number of formats at one time. When you modify the paragraph attributes of a style sheet, all the paragraphs to which that style sheet
has been applied are automatically updated to reflect the modifications.

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å

You can copy any applied paragraph formats from one paragraph to other
paragraphs in the same box or text chain. To copy applied paragraph formats,
select the paragraph or range of paragraphs that you want to change, then
press Option+Shift (Mac OS) or Alt+Shift (Windows) while clicking anywhere
in the paragraph with the formats you want to copy. Copying paragraph
formats in this way will not change any character attributes.
To use rules in text, see “Creating Rules Above and Below Paragraphs” in
Chapter 10, “Graphics in Typography.”

S P E C I F Y I N G A L I G N M E N T A N D I N D E N TAT I O N S P
QuarkXPress lets you specify how paragraphs are spaced horizontally in a column or
text box using alignment and indentation controls. Alignment and indentations are
both measured from the Text Inset specified in the Text tab of the Modify dialog box
(Item menu). The Text Inset value affects the four sides of a text box; it does not
affect the inner columns of a text box.
ALIGNMENTS

QuarkXPress includes five paragraph alignments: Left, Centered, Right,
Justified, and Forced.
• Left: Aligns selected paragraphs with the left indentation, or flush left.
• Centered: Aligns selected paragraphs between left and right indentations.
• Right: Aligns selected paragraphs with the right indentation, or flush right.
• Justified: Aligns selected paragraphs with both the left and right indentations.
Space is added or removed between characters or words to extend from the left
indentation to the right indentation, except for the last line.
• Forced: Aligns all lines between the left and right indentations, like the Justified
option, but includes the last line.
SPECIFYING ALIGNMENT

You can specify the alignment of selected paragraphs using any of the
following options:
STYLE MENU

Choose Style & Alignment and choose an alignment from the submenu.
Alternately, choose Style & Formats (C+Shift+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+F on
Windows). Choose an option from the Alignment pop-up menu. Click OK.

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ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS

Click an alignment icon in the Measurements palette or press the appropriate
keyboard command.
ALIGNMENT

ICON

MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Left

{

C+Shift+L

Ctrl+Shift+L

Centered

}

C+Shift+C

Ctrl+Shift+C

Right

[

C+Shift+R

Ctrl+Shift+R

Justified*

$

C+Shift+J

Ctrl+Shift+J

Forced*

]

C+Option+
Shift+J

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+J

*Not available in HTML text boxes.
å

To specify that a single word alone on a line in a justified paragraph should
extend from the left indentation to the right indentation, check Single Word
Justify (Edit & H&Js & Edit) for the hyphenation and justification specification
that is applied to that paragraph. Single Word Justify does not apply when
the single word on the line is the last line of a paragraph. (This option is not
available in HTML text boxes.)
The last line of a justified paragraph is justified only when text falls within
the paragraph’s Flush Zone (Edit & H&Js & Edit). To justify all lines in a paragraph, no matter how short the last line, choose Forced (Style & Formats).

S P E C I F Y I N G I N D E N TAT I O N S

You can indent paragraphs from the left and right edges of a box or column, and
specify a unique indentation for the first line of a paragraph. To specify indents
for selected paragraphs:

1 Choose Style & Formats (C+Shift+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+F on Windows).
A ruler displays above the column containing the first selected paragraph. The
ruler contains triangular icons for specifying paragraph indentations. Drag the
icons to change the indentations: left K, first line k, and right J. When a paragraph in a rotated or skewed text box is selected, the ruler only displays within
the dialog box.

Choosing Style & Formats displays a ruler above the column containing the first
selected paragraph.

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To specify indents, enter values in the Left Indent, First Line, and Right Indent fields in the
Formats tab of the Paragraph Attributes dialog box (Style & Formats).

2 To specify how far a paragraph is indented from the left edge of a box or
column, enter a value in the Left Indent field.

3 To specify how far the first line of a paragraph is indented from the Left Indent
value, enter a value in the First Line field.
First Line indentation is relative to the Left Indent applied to a paragraph. For
example, if you specify a Left Indent of .5", and a First Line indentation of .5",
the first line will begin 1" from the left edge of the text box.

4 To specify how far a paragraph is indented from the right edge of a box or
column, enter a value in the Right Indent field. Click OK.
å

To create a hanging indentation, specify a positive Left Indent and a negative
First Line indentation or drag the indentation icons on the column ruler. Use
the Apply button in the Formats tab of the Paragraph Attributes dialog box
(Style & Formats) to experiment with the hanging indentation.
In addition to setting hanging indents as a paragraph attribute, you can enter a
special character that forces the indenting of all lines of text from that point to
the next paragraph return. Press C+\ (Mac OS) or Ctrl+\ (Windows) to enter
a special Indent Here character. (The Indent Here character is an invisible
character; to view invisible characters, choose View & Show Invisibles
(C+I on Mac OS, Ctrl+I on Windows.)

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S P E C I F Y I N G L E A D I N G A N D PA R A G R A P H S PA C I N G
QuarkXPress gives you precise control over the space between lines in paragraphs and
the space between paragraphs. Leading is a measure of line spacing — the distance
between text baselines in paragraphs. When you specify a leading value, it is applied
to all lines in selected paragraphs. Space Before and Space After controls let you
specify the amount of space before and after selected paragraphs. Leading and space
before or after can both be specified in style sheets.
METHODS FOR SPECIFYING LEADING

QuarkXPress lets you specify leading by three methods: absolute leading,
incremental auto leading, and percentage-based auto leading. Default auto
leading may be either incremental or percentage-based.
ABSOLUTE LEADING

Absolute leading sets the distance between baselines of text to a specific
value, regardless of the size of characters on the lines. For example, if you
specify an absolute leading value of 16 points for a paragraph, all baselines
will be spaced 16 points apart. When specifying absolute leading, use a value
that is the total vertical distance you want between text baselines.
INCREMENTAL AUTO LEADING

Incremental auto leading combines a base amount of auto leading with an
absolute value specified in the Leading field (Style menu). Incremental leading
values must be preceded by a plus (+) or minus (–) sign.
DEFAULT AUTO LEADING

Entering the word “auto” or a “0” in the Leading field (Style menu) tells
QuarkXPress to use the value in the Auto Leading field of the Preferences
dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences & Paragraph pane) to decide
whether percentage-based or incremental auto leading occurs. The default —
percentage-based — takes the base amount of auto leading and adds to it a
fixed percentage of the largest font size on the upper line to determine the
total amount of leading between an auto-leaded line and the line above it.
The default value for percentage-based auto leading is 20%.

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∫

If fonts or font sizes are mixed and matched, an auto-leaded paragraph may
have a different amount of space between each line. Auto leading starts with a
base amount of leading, which QuarkXPress determines by looking at the userspecified font size, then calculating the ascent and descent values of the fonts
in each line of text. (Ascent and descent values are built into the fonts by the
font designer.)

å

The Paragraph pane of the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences &
Preferences) contains radio buttons that let you set leading in Typesetting
mode or Word Processing mode. In Typesetting mode, leading is measured
from baseline to baseline. In Word Processing mode, leading is measured from
the ascent of a line to the ascent of the next line. Typesetting mode is the
default (and is the preferred method of measuring leading). Word Processing
mode is included to provide compatibility with the leading methods of some
word processing programs.

SPECIFYING LEADING

You can specify the leading of selected paragraphs using any of the
following options:
STYLE MENU

Choose Style & Leading (C+Shift+E on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+E on Windows).
Enter an absolute leading value, an incremental leading value (preceded by a
plus or minus sign), or “auto” in the Leading field. Click OK.
MEASUREMENTS PALETTE

Select the leading field, enter an absolute leading value, an incremental
leading value (preceded by a plus or minus sign), or the word “auto” in the
leading field. Or, click the leading icons n to increase or decrease leading in
1–point increments.

Specify leading for selected paragraphs in the leading field of the Measurements palette.

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ç

KEYBOARD COMMANDS

Press the appropriate keyboard command.
LEADING CHANGE

MAC OS
COMMAND

WINDOWS
COMMAND

Decrease 1 point

C+Shift+:

Ctrl+Shift+:

Decrease .1 point

C+Option+
Shift+:

Ctrl+Alt+Shift+:

Increase 1 point

C+Shift+”

Ctrl+Alt+Shift+”

Increase .1 point

C+Option+
Shift+”

Ctrl+Alt+
Shift+”

∫

When you use the leading icons or keyboard commands to adjust auto-leaded
paragraphs, QuarkXPress first converts the auto leading value to the closest
absolute value (based on the largest font size in the paragraph). QuarkXPress
then adds or subtracts the amount you specify by using the leading icons or
keyboard commands. For example, a paragraph of 10-point text with 20%
auto leading applied is converted to 12 points of absolute leading. Then,
pressing C+Shift+: (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Shift+: (Windows) reduces the absolute
leading to 11 points.

å

The default measurement unit for leading is points; however, you can specify
leading values using any of the measurement systems that QuarkXPress
supports. The value entered is always converted to points for display.

S P E C I F Y I N G S PA C E B E F O R E A N D A F T E R PA R A G R A P H S

QuarkXPress lets you specify an absolute amount of space to place before and
after a paragraph. The alternative, adding space by entering paragraph returns,
can result in inconsistent line spacing.
To specify the amount of space between selected paragraphs, choose Style &
Formats (C+Shift+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+F on Windows). Enter values in the
Space Before or Space After fields. The sum of the values in the Space Before
and Space After fields determines the total space between the selected paragraphs. Click OK.

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∫

The Space Before feature does not place space before the first paragraph in a
column or text box. To control the space at the top of a column or text box, use
the controls in the First Baseline area of the Text tab in the Modify dialog box
(Item menu).

å

The typesetting term set solid refers to lines of text that have no additional space
between lines. For example, 10-point type with 10-point leading is set solid.
When you apply a leading value of +0, lines of text are set solid no matter what
fonts or font sizes they contain.

S E T T I N G TA B S P
Tabs let you position text consistently. Use tabs when you want to create columnar
data, or to move text more than a single word space. QuarkXPress has six kinds of tab
stops: Left 1, Center 3, Right 2, Decimal 5, Comma p, and Align On s. Tabs are
paragraph attributes, and can be specified in style sheets. If you do not set custom tabs,
QuarkXPress sets default left-aligned tabs every half-inch.
S E T T I N G TA B S T O P S

You can control how text aligns on a tab stop. Most tabs used in text have left
alignment, but you may want to use centered or right alignment in tables.
When creating tables or columns, aligning text on characters is useful for keeping text and numbers aligned properly. You can align tabs on a decimal point,
comma, or any character. To set tabs for selected paragraph(s):

1 Choose Style & Tabs (C+Shift+T on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+T on Windows).
A ruler displays above the column containing the first selected paragraph. The
ruler is useful for previewing and modifying tabs in the selected paragraphs.
Because of document or screen size restrictions, both ends of the tab ruler may
not be visible. To view either end of the ruler, drag a tab stop indicator to the
left or the right end; the ruler and page will scroll to display the hidden portion.
When a paragraph in a rotated or skewed text box is selected, the ruler only
displays within the Tabs tab of the Paragraph Attributes dialog box.
å

To view tab characters on-screen, choose View & Show Invisibles. Tabs are
displayed as . arrows.

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Setting Tabs

Specify tabs using the icons and fields in the Tabs tab of the Paragraph Attributes dialog box
(Style & Formats).

A ruler displays above the column containing the first selected paragraph. The example shows,
from left to right, an Align On tab stop (aligned on the slash), a Left tab stop, a Right tab stop,
and a Decimal tab stop.

2 Click a tab icon to specify the tab alignment, then drag it into position on the
tab ruler.
• Left 1 aligns text flush left on the tab stop.
• Center 3 aligns text centrally on that tab stop.
• Right 2 aligns text flush right on the tab stop.
• Decimal 5 aligns text on a decimal point (period).
• Comma p aligns text on a first comma.
• Align On s aligns text on any character you specify. When you select this tab,
the Align On field displays. Select the existing entry, and enter the character
to align on.

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You can also click the tab icon, enter a value in the Position field, and click Set.
When you click Set, it deselects the current tab selection in the ruler.

3 To insert fill characters (characters that alternate to fill the space between text
and tab stops, as in a table of contents), enter up to two characters or spaces in
the Fill Character field. Click OK.
∫

If you choose Decimal or Comma alignment, the tab will align on one of those
characters, or on the first nonnumeric character following a numeral. This lets
you correctly align columns containing numbers in parentheses.

å

You can create a series of tabs that are a consistent distance apart from each
other — incremental tabs — by using mathematical operators in the Position
field. Place the first tab, click Set, then add the distance to it in the Position
field. For example, if you have a tab at p9, you can create another tab 9 picas
away by selecting the tab at p9 and clicking Set. Then enter “+p9” after the “p9”
in the Position field
. Click Set again. You can add (+), subtract (-),
multiply (*), and divide (/) values in any QuarkXPress fields.
If you repeatedly use the same set of specifications to align tabular material in a
document, you may want to create a style sheet with the appropriate character
attributes, paragraph attributes, tab settings, and rules. This will save you the
work of reconstructing similarly formatted material.

M O D I F Y I N G A N D D E L E T I N G TA B S

As your text and design change, you may need to modify and delete tabs.
To modify tabs in selected paragraphs:

1 Choose Style & Tabs (C+Shift+T on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+T on Windows).
2 Click a tab icon (1, 2, 3, 5, p, or s) on the ruler to select it. Information about the
tab displays in the fields.
• To modify a tab’s alignment, click another tab icon in the dialog box. If you
click Align On, enter a character in the Align On field.
• To modify a tab’s position, drag it on the ruler or enter a new value in the
Position field.
• To modify a tab’s fill character, select the Fill Character field and enter up
to two new characters.
• To delete a tab, drag it off the ruler.
• To delete all tabs, click Clear All, or press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows)
while clicking on the tab ruler.

3 Click OK.

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∫

When you delete tabs, existing tabs in the document revert to the default
spacing of .5" apart.

å

Press Option+Tab (Mac OS) or Shift+Tab (Windows) to create a right-indent tab,
which lets you align characters flush with the right indentation. A right-indent
tab overrides all other tabs for the paragraph. This tab is useful, for example,
when you want to place an end of story icon.
The Normal print paragraph style sheet is automatically applied when you
start typing in a new text box. By default, tab spaces are .5" apart. You can edit
the Normal style sheet for a specific document, or you can edit it when no
documents are open so the changes apply to all new documents.

CONTROLLING WIDOW AND ORPHAN LINES P
QuarkXPress lets you control two kinds of typographically undesirable lines known as
widows and orphans. Traditionally, a widow is defined as the last line of a paragraph
that falls at the top of a column. An orphan is the first line of a paragraph that falls
at the bottom of a column.
Using the Keep Lines Together feature, you can choose not to break paragraphs, so
that if all the lines in a paragraph do not fit in a column or on a page, the whole paragraph will flow to the top of the next column or page. Alternately, you can specify the
number of lines that must be left at the bottom of a column or box, and at the top of
the following column or box, when a paragraph is broken. Using the Keep with Next ¶
feature, you can keep a paragraph together with the paragraph that follows it. This lets
you keep a subhead together with the paragraph that follows it, or keep other lines of
text that logically go together from being separated.
KEEP WITH NEXT ¶

The Keep with Next ¶ feature forces a one-line paragraph to flow with the
paragraph that follows it. If the paragraph is longer than one line, the last line
will flow with the next paragraph (unless you also specify Keep Lines Together
for the paragraph). This prevents a subhead from remaining at the bottom of a
column when its associated paragraph flows to the top of the next column. To
specify Keep with Next ¶:

1 Select the paragraph that you want to stay with the next paragraph.
2 Choose Style & Formats (C+Shift+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+F on Windows).
3 Check Keep with Next ¶. Click OK.

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∫

You can select multiple paragraphs and specify Keep with Next ¶, if they are all
one line paragraphs, or used with Keep Lines Together. However, if you try to
keep more paragraphs together than will fit in a column, you will end up with
text overflow.

KEEPING LINES TOGETHER

The Keep Lines Together feature specifies whether lines in paragraphs flow
together or are separated when they reach the bottoms of columns. This can
prevent the first line of a paragraph from remaining at the bottom of a column
or the last line from flowing to the top of a column. To specify Keep Lines
Together for selected paragraphs:

1 Choose Style & Formats (C+Shift+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+F on Windows).
2 Check Keep Lines Together, and click one of the following options:
• Click All Lines in ¶ to keep all the lines of a paragraph in the same column
or box, rather than breaking at the bottom. The paragraph is treated as an
indivisible unit.
• Click Start and enter a value in the Start field to specify the number of lines
to keep together at the bottom of a column or box when a paragraph must be
broken. Enter a value in the End field to specify the number of lines to keep
together at the top of a column or box when a paragraph must be broken.
The default value of “2” for both the Start and End fields prevents single lines
from occurring at either the bottom or top of a column, thus avoiding widows
and orphans.

3 Click OK.
å

Generally, you will specify Keep with Next ¶ for your headline and subhead
style sheets. If you have two-line headlines and subheads, you may want to specify Keep Lines Together, with All Lines in ¶ checked. Then, you will probably
specify Keep Lines Together (usually with Start and End parameters) for your
body text style sheets.
If you apply either the Keep Lines Together or Keep with Next ¶ option to
paragraphs and the column that contains the paragraphs is obstructed by an
item that divides the column or text box into two parts, QuarkXPress will flow
the lines of text around the obstruction to maintain the Keep Lines Together
and Keep with Next ¶ specifications.
A single paragraph that is too large to fit in a single column or box will result
in text overflow, and the Text Overflow icon t displays at the bottom of the
text box.

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C O N T R O L L I N G H Y P H E N AT I O N A N D J U S T I F I C AT I O N P
QuarkXPress lets you group hyphenation rules and justification settings as a single
specification that you can apply to paragraphs. You can create a number of hyphenation and justification specifications for a single document. Because hyphenation
and justification specifications are a paragraph attribute, you can apply different
sets of hyphenation rules and justification settings to paragraphs with different
needs. You can edit a hyphenation and justification specification after it has been
applied to paragraphs. When you edit a hyphenation and justification specification,
paragraphs to which it is applied are reflowed according to the modified hyphenation
rules and justification settings.
QuarkXPress also lets you control hyphenation by creating lists of hyphenation exceptions. Using the Hyphenation Exceptions feature, you can prevent certain words from
being hyphenated or require that they only be hyphenated between certain syllables.
C R E AT I N G H Y P H E N AT I O N A N D J U S T I F I C AT I O N S P E C I F I C AT I O N S

QuarkXPress provides a default hyphenation and justification specification
called Standard. Standard is the default hyphenation and justification
specification specified for the Normal paragraph style sheet and for all
newly created paragraph style sheets. To create additional hyphenation
and justification specifications:

1 Choose Edit & H&Js (C+Option+H on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+F11 on Windows).

Create new hyphenation and justification specifications in the H&Js dialog box (Edit menu).

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2 Click New.

Set hyphenation and justification specifications in the Edit Hyphenation & Justification
dialog box.

3 Enter a descriptive name for the hyphenation and justification specification in
the Name field. For example, you might name it “body copy.”

4 Check Auto Hyphenation to have QuarkXPress automatically hyphenate
paragraphs to the specifications set in this area:
• Smallest Word: Enter a value from 3 to 20 to specify the minimum number of
characters a word must contain to be hyphenated.
• Minimum Before: Enter a value from 1 to 6 to specify the smallest number of
characters that must precede an automatic hyphen.
• Minimum After: Enter a value from 2 to 8 to specify the smallest number of
characters that must follow an automatic hyphen.
• Break Capitalized Words: Check this to enable hyphenation for words that
start with an uppercase character (for example, proper nouns and the first words
of sentences).

5 Enter a value in the Hyphens in a Row field to specify the maximum number of
consecutive lines that can end in manually or automatically hyphenated words.
If you do not want to limit the number of consecutive lines that end with a
hyphen, choose Unlimited from the pop-up menu.

6 Enter a value in the Hyphenation Zone field to specify the area within which
hyphenation (automatic or manual) can occur. The Hyphenation Zone is measured from the right indentation to the end of a line of text. Hyphenation Zone
values apply only to nonjustified paragraphs.
• When you specify a Hyphenation Zone greater than 0", QuarkXPress hyphenates a word only when: (1) the previous word ends before the Hyphenation
Zone and (2) an acceptable hyphenation point falls within the Hyphenation
Zone. Hyphenation Zone values apply only to nonjustified text.

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• A Hyphenation Zone value of 0" means that there is no Hyphenation Zone. In
this case, QuarkXPress either hyphenates a word according to the other hyphenation criteria or wraps it to the next line if it will not fit completely on the line.

7 Enter values in the Justification Method area to specify how words and characters are spaced. The values in the Min. (Mac OS) or Minimum (Windows)
and Max. (Mac OS) or Maximum (Windows) fields apply to paragraphs with
Justified or Forced alignment (Style & Alignment). The values in the Opt.
(Mac OS) or Optimum (Windows) fields apply to all paragraphs, regardless
of their alignment.

The Justification Method area allows you to specify the justification method.

• Min. Space (Mac OS) or Minimum Space (Windows): Enter a value in this field
to specify the minimum amount of space between words in justified paragraphs.
• Opt. Space (Mac OS) or Optimum Space (Windows): Enter a value in this
field to specify the optimum amount of space between words in justified and
nonjustified paragraphs.
• Max. Space (Mac OS) or Maximum Space (Windows): Enter a value in
this field to specify the maximum amount of space between words in
justified paragraphs.
• Min. Char (Mac OS) or Minimum Char (Windows): Enter a value in this
field to specify the minimum amount of space between characters in
justified paragraphs.
• Opt. Char (Mac OS) or Optimum Char (Windows): Enter a value in this field
to specify the optimum amount of space between characters in justified and
nonjustified paragraphs.
• Max. Char (Mac OS) or Maximum Char (Windows): Enter a value in this
field to specify the maximum amount of space between characters in
justified paragraphs.

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The values in the Minimum, Optimum, and Maximum Space fields in the
Justification Method area are expressed as a percentage of the normal space
width in a font. The width of spaces in justified text will vary according to
these values.
The values in the Minimum, Optimum, and Maximum Character fields are
expressed as a percentage of the width of an en space that can be added or
removed between characters. The intercharacter spacing of characters other
than spaces within justified text will be adjusted to these values.

8 Enter a value in the Flush Zone field to specify the area within which the last
word in the last line of a justified paragraph must fall in order to be justified.
If you enter 1", the last line of a paragraph to which the hyphenation and
justification specification is applied must extend to within 1" of the right
indentation to be justified.

9 Check Single Word Justify to specify that a single word on a line in a justified
paragraph should extend from the left indentation to the right indentation. If
Single Word Justify is unchecked, a single word on a line will be left-aligned.

10 Click OK; then click Save in the H&Js dialog box.
∫

When you find a word that does not hyphenate the way you prefer, you can add
it to your list of hyphenation exceptions (Utilities & Hyphenation Exceptions).

å

QuarkXPress lets you adjust word and character spacing in a number of ways.
Hyphenation and justification specifications, local kerning and tracking, kerning
tables, and customized tracking tables can combine to affect overall word and
character spacing.
In addition to hyphenating text automatically, you can control line breaks
and text flow by inserting manual, or discretionary hyphens (C+- [hyphen] on
Mac OS, Ctrl+- [hyphen] on Windows). Discretionary hyphens are inserted
only when words are broken at the ends of lines.
As is true with words in general, the Hyphens in a Row and Hyphenation Zone
values specified for a paragraph’s hyphenation and justification specification
also affect the way QuarkXPress hyphenates words in which you have entered
discretionary hyphens. If hyphenating a word at a discretionary hyphenation
point would violate one of these rules, the word will not be hyphenated.
Use Forced alignment (Style & Alignment) to justify the last line of a paragraph even if it does not fall within the Flush Zone specified for the paragraph’s
hyphenation and justification specification. The last line must have a paragraph
return after it for this to work. Forced alignment also overrides the Single Word
Justify setting.

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A P P LY I N G H Y P H E N AT I O N A N D J U S T I F I C AT I O N S P E C I F I C AT I O N S

Each paragraph in QuarkXPress has a hyphenation and justification specification associated with it, because each print paragraph style sheet specifies
a hyphenation and justification specification. Usually you will specify a
hyphenation and justification specification that is appropriate to the information in the paragraph — for example, the hyphenation and justification
specification applied to body text may hyphenate text automatically, while
the hyphenation and justification specification applied to headlines may
prevent hyphenation.
To change the hyphenation and justification specification applied to selected
paragraphs, choose Style & Formats (C+Shift+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+F on
Windows). Choose an option from the H&J pop-up menu and click OK.
E D I T I N G , D U P L I C AT I N G , A N D D E L E T I N G H Y P H E N AT I O N A N D
J U S T I F I C AT I O N S P E C I F I C AT I O N S

The H&Js dialog box (Edit menu) lets you edit, duplicate, and delete a document’s hyphenation and justification specifications. Select a hyphenation and
justification specification in the list and click one of these buttons:
• Edit opens the hyphenation and justification specification so you can modify it.
• Duplicate creates a copy of the hyphenation and justification specification that
you can rename and modify.
• Delete removes the hyphenation and justification specification from the list
and lets you choose a replacement specification for all instances of the
deleted specification.
After you modify the hyphenation and justification specifications used in a
document, the text will reflow accordingly.
å

If you create or edit hyphenation and justification specifications with no
documents open, the changes affect all new documents. If you create or
edit hyphenation and justification specifications with a document open,
the changes affect the active document. If you make the same changes to
the Standard hyphenation and justification specification often, you may
want to edit it with no documents open.
To compare two existing hyphenation and justification specifications, choose
Edit & H&Js. Shift-click to select two consecutive items or C+click (Mac OS) or
Ctrl+click (Windows) to select two nonconsecutive items. Press Option (Mac OS)
or Ctrl (Windows) to change the Append button to Compare. Click Compare
to display a summary of each component; the differences display in bold.
You can also compare two hyphenation and justification specifications in
the Description field of the File & Append dialog box.

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A P P E N D I N G H Y P H E N AT I O N A N D J U S T I F I C AT I O N S P E C I F I C AT I O N S

Using the Append feature, you can import hyphenation and justification
specification settings from other documents rather than recreating them.

1 Choose Edit & H&Js (C+Option+H on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+F11 on Windows).
2 Click Append.
3 Locate and select the document to append hyphenation and justification
specifications from; click Open.

4 The Available column lists all the hyphenation and justification specifications
in the source document. Select the hyphenation and justification specifications
you want to import into the active document and double-click them, or click
the arrow icon ‡ to move them to the Include column, or click Include All.
To select one hyphenation and justification specification, click it. To select consecutive hyphenation and justification specifications, press Shift while you click
the first and last items in the range. To select nonconsecutive hyphenation and
justification specifications, press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while you click
each one.

Select hyphenation and justification specifications in the Available column to append to the
active document.

5 Click OK; then click Save to close the dialog box.
∫

If a hyphenation and justification specification from the source document has
the same name as a hyphenation and justification specification in the target
document, but is defined differently, the Append Conflict dialog box displays.
See the next section for information about resolving these types of conflicts.

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R E S O LV I N G H Y P H E N AT I O N A N D J U S T I F I C AT I O N
S P E C I F I C AT I O N C O N F L I C T S

The Append Conflict dialog box provides options for handling imported
hyphenation and justification specifications that have the same name, but different specifications, as existing hyphenation and justification specifications.
The Existing and New lists display descriptions of the hyphenation and justification specifications to help you make decisions on handling the conflict.

Use the buttons in the Append Conflict dialog box to resolve name conflicts when appending
hyphenation and justification specifications.

• Rename: Click Rename to display a dialog box that lets you rename the
hyphenation and justification specification. Enter a new name and click OK.
• Auto-Rename: Click Auto-Rename to have QuarkXPress place an asterisk in
front of the appended specification’s name.
• Use New: Click Use New to have the appended hyphenation and justification
specification overwrite the existing specification.
• Use Existing: Click Use Existing to prevent the appended specification from
replacing the existing specification; the existing hyphenation and justification
specification remains unchanged in the document.
If you want all hyphenation and justification specifications with conflicting
names to be handled the same way, check Repeat For All Conflicts. For
example, if you want to rename all conflicting hyphenation and justification
specifications, check Repeat for All Conflicts, then click Rename. This check
box applies to the current document only.

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å

If you want to import style sheets, colors, dashes and stripes styles, and lists
along with hyphenation and justification specifications, choose File & Append.
The Append dialog box lets you selectively import items such as style sheets and
colors from another document.
The Description list in the Append H&Js dialog box lists all the attributes
applied to the selected hyphenation and justification specification, so you can
determine which specification to append.

S P E C I F Y I N G H Y P H E N AT I O N E X C E P T I O N S

If you prefer certain words hyphenate in certain ways, you can specify that
hyphenation in a list of “hyphenation exceptions.” You can even specify that
certain words do not hyphenate at all. To create a list of hyphenation exceptions
for the active document:

1 Choose Utilities & Hyphenation Exceptions.

Create a list of hyphenation exceptions by entering words and hyphens in the Hyphenation
Exceptions dialog box (Utilities menu).

2 Enter a word in the field with hyphens to represent the preferred hyphenation.
You cannot enter spaces or other punctuation.
For example, enter “mul-ti-me-dia” to allow hyphenation between any of those
syllables, enter “multi-media” to allow hyphenation between “multi” and
“media,” and enter “multimedia” to prevent automatic hyphenation.

3 Click Add.
4 Enter any variations of the word, with hyphens, that you want to hyphenate
the same way. For example, enter “pro-cess” and “pro-cesses” to specify that the
singular and plural forms hyphenate the same way.

5 When you are finished adding words and variations of words, click Save.

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∫

For information about how hyphenation exceptions are stored in the “XPress
Preferences” file, see “Saving QuarkXPress Preferences” in Chapter 1,
“Customizing QuarkXPress.”

å

You can prevent a word from being hyphenated by entering a discretionary
hyphen (C+- [hyphen] on Mac OS, Ctrl+- [hyphen] on Windows) immediately
before it or by entering the word in your Hyphenation Exceptions list (Utilities
menu). To prevent the hyphenation of a compound word, add a discretionary
hyphen immediately before the words. The compound word will then only
break at the hyphen.
To display suggested syllable breaks for a word, place the Text Insertion bar I
within or to the right of the word and choose Utilities & Suggested Hyphenation. The Suggested Hyphenation dialog box displays the hyphenated
word based on the hyphenation and justification specification applied to the
paragraph, your list of hyphenation exceptions, the QuarkXPress hyphenation
dictionary, and the QuarkXPress hyphenation algorithm.
To specify that a compound word can only be hyphenated at the hyphen, you
can add both words to the list of hyphenation exceptions without hyphens. For
example, if you want to prevent “context-sensitive” from breaking in the middle
of the word “context” rather than after the hyphen, add both “context” and
“sensitive” to your hyphenation exceptions with no hyphens.

WORKING WITH STYLE SHEETS P
A style sheet is a group of paragraph attributes, character attributes, or both that
can be applied to selected paragraphs and characters in one step. Use style sheets to
change unformatted text into headlines, subheadings, captions, body copy, etc.
Using style sheets to apply a number of character and paragraph attributes at one
time reduces layout time and helps maintain typographic consistency.
C R E AT I N G PA R A G R A P H S T Y L E S H E E T S

A paragraph style sheet controls all paragraph attributes and character attributes
of the selected paragraph. Paragraph style sheets get their character attributes
from their associated character style sheet. To create a new paragraph style sheet:

1 Choose Edit & Style Sheets (Shift+F11). The Style Sheet list displays the style
sheets currently defined for the document (or the default list of style sheets if
no documents are open).

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Create a new paragraph style sheet in the Style Sheets dialog box.

When you create a new style sheet with no documents open, that style sheet
becomes part of the default style sheet list and is included in all subsequently
created documents. When you create a style sheet with a document open, that
style sheet is included only in the active document’s style sheet list.
The Show pop-up menu lets you display the type of style sheets shown in the
list. You can choose All Style Sheets, Paragraph Style Sheets, Character Style
Sheets, Style Sheets in Use, and Style Sheets not Used.

2 Click the New button and choose Paragraph.
• Name: Enter a name in this field, or QuarkXPress will use a default “New Style
Sheet” name.
• Keyboard Equivalent: To define a keyboard command for the style sheet, enter
one in the Keyboard Equivalent field. You can enter any combination of C,
Option, Shift, or Control (Mac OS), or Ctrl or Ctrl+Alt (Windows), along with a
function or keypad key.
If you define a keyboard equivalent for a style sheet with a key sequence that
also defines a QuarkXPress command, the style sheet command will override
the QuarkXPress command when the Content tool E is selected and a text
box is active.
• Based on: To base the attributes of a new style sheet on an existing one, click
the Based on pop-up menu and choose a style sheet from the list.

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• Next Style: To select a transition from one paragraph style sheet to another after
typing a carriage return, choose a paragraph style sheet from the Next Style
pop-up menu. The default setting keeps the same style sheet applied.
Applying a paragraph style sheet with a Next Style defined does not apply the
Next Style to subsequent paragraphs that are already typed. The Next Style
applies only to text typed after pressing Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows).
• Style: To associate a character style sheet with the paragraph style sheet, choose
an option from the Style pop-up menu in the Character Attributes area. To
create a character style sheet, see “Creating Print Character Style Sheets” later
in this chapter.

∫

If you use the Based on pop-up menu in the Edit Paragraph Style Sheet dialog
box to base a style sheet on an existing one, changes you make to the original
style sheet are automatically applied to those based on it.

3 Choose any of the next three tabs: Formats, Tabs, or Rules to specify those
attributes or properties for your paragraph style sheet.

Specify a paragraph style sheet’s attributes in the Edit Paragraph Style Sheet dialog box.

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• Formats: Click the Formats tab to specify the style sheet’s paragraph formats.
For specific information about the controls in this dialog box, see “Applying
Paragraph Attributes” in this chapter.
• Tabs: Click Tabs to specify the style sheet’s tab stops. For specific information
about the controls in this dialog box, see “Setting Tabs” in this chapter.
• Rules: Click Rules to specify lines that flow with text. To anchor a rule,
see “Creating Rules Above and Below Paragraphs” in Chapter 10, “Graphics
in Typography.”

4 Click OK to return to the Style Sheets dialog box; then click Save to save the
style sheet for the document. After you save a paragraph style sheet, it is listed
in the Paragraph Style Sheet submenu (Style menu) and also in the Style
Sheets palette.
å

To create a new paragraph style sheet based on formatted text, first select or
place the Text Insertion bar I within a paragraph that contains the format
attributes that you want in your paragraph style sheet. Choose Edit & Style
Sheets to display the Style Sheets dialog box. Choose New & Paragraph and
enter a name in the Name field. Click Save. Then apply the new style sheet to
the paragraph.

C R E AT I N G C H A R A C T E R S T Y L E S H E E T S

Each paragraph style sheet contains a character style sheet, which defines the
default character attributes (font, type style, etc.) for the paragraph style sheet.
Character style sheets can also be created independently of paragraph style
sheets to apply local formatting to text. For example, on this page the numbers
are formatted to be bold, purple, and use the font Helvetica 75, while the rest of
the text is another style. The three-step process of applying all the attributes to
the numbers is condensed to one step with a character style sheet. To create a
new character style sheet:

1 Choose Edit & Style Sheets (Shift+F11). The Style Sheets list displays the style
sheets currently defined for the document (or the default list of style sheets if
no documents are open).

2 Click the New button and choose Character. The Edit Character Style Sheet
dialog box displays the character attributes at the position of the text insertion
point i, or the attributes of the first character of selected text. If no text is
selected, it displays the attributes of the default character style sheet.
• Name: Enter a name in this field, or QuarkXPress will use the default “New
Style Sheet” name.

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• Keyboard Equivalent: To define a keyboard command for the style sheet, enter
one in the Keyboard Equivalent field. You can enter any combination of C,
Option, Shift, or Control (Mac OS), or Ctrl or Ctrl+Alt (Windows), along with a
function or keypad key.
• Based On: To base the attributes of a new style sheet on an existing one, click
the Based On pop-up menu and choose a style sheet from the list.
• Character Attributes: Choose character attributes from the lower section of the
Edit Character Style Sheet dialog box. For information about character
attributes, see “Applying Character Attributes” earlier in this chapter.

The Edit Character Style Sheet dialog box (Edit & Style Sheets) allows you to create print
character style sheets.

3 Click OK to return to the Style Sheets dialog box; then click Save to save the
character style sheet for the document. After you save a character style sheet,
it is listed in the Character Style Sheet submenu (Style menu) and also in the
Style Sheets palette.

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å

You can open the Style Sheets dialog box by pressing C (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Shift
(Windows) while you click a style sheet name in the Style Sheets palette.
If you press Control (Mac OS) while you click a style sheet name, or right-click
or Ctrl+click (Windows) a style sheet name, the context menu displays. If
you choose Edit, Duplicate, or New, the Edit Paragraph Style Sheet or Edit
Character Style Sheet dialog box displays for the selected style sheet. If you
choose Delete, an alert dialog box will display if that style sheet is applied
in the document. Choose a replacement style sheet from the dialog box’s
pop-up menu.
When you copy and paste text from one QuarkXPress document (the source) to
another (the target), any paragraph or character style sheets associated with the
text are added to the target document. If the style sheet names match existing
names in the target document, the text will maintain the source document’s
attributes, and a plus sign (+) may display next to the style sheet name in
the Style Sheets palette.
If you select multiple paragraphs that have multiple character and paragraph
style sheets applied, the Style Sheets palette will display those style sheet’s
paragraph and character icons in gray.

A S S O C I AT I N G C H A R A C T E R S T Y L E S H E E T S W I T H PA R A G R A P H
STYLE SHEETS

To specify the default character attributes for the paragraph, you associate a
character style sheet with a paragraph style sheet. To do so:

1 Choose Edit & Style Sheets (Shift+F11) and choose an option from the Show
pop-up menu.

2 Select a paragraph style sheet in the Style Sheets list and click Edit.
3 Select a character style sheet from the Style pop-up menu to associate with the
paragraph style sheet.

4 Click OK, and then click Save in the Style Sheets dialog box. All text will be
updated and may reflow for paragraph style sheets with the newly associated
character style sheet.
A P P LY I N G PA R A G R A P H S T Y L E S H E E T S

You can apply paragraph style sheets to any selected paragraphs. A selected paragraph is a paragraph that contains the text insertion point i or selected text. You
can apply a paragraph style sheet three ways:
• Style Sheet submenu: Choose Style & Paragraph Style Sheet. Select a
style sheet from the submenu. The paragraph style sheet will be applied to
the paragraph.

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• Style Sheets palette: Choose View & Show Style Sheets (F11). Click the
paragraph style sheet name in the Style Sheets palette.
• Keyboard command: Enter the keyboard command displayed next to the style
sheet name in the Style Sheets palette. Keyboard equivalents are assigned in
the Edit Paragraph Style Sheet dialog box (Edit & Style Sheets & [select
style sheet] & Edit button).

The Style Sheets palette allows you to apply paragraph (upper) and character (lower)
style sheets.

å

When local paragraph or character attributes exist in selected text, a plus sign
displays next to the style sheet name in the Style Sheets palette. To remove local
attributes, select No Style and reselect the style sheet, or press Option (Mac OS)
or Alt (Windows) while clicking the style sheet name.

A P P LY I N G C H A R A C T E R S T Y L E S H E E T S

You can apply a character style sheet to any selected text or at the text insertion
point i. You can apply a character style sheet three ways:
• Style Sheet submenu: Choose Style & Character Style Sheet. Select a character style sheet from the submenu. The character style sheet will be applied
to the text.
• Style Sheets palette: Choose View & Show Style Sheets (F11). Click the
character style sheet name in the Style Sheets palette.
• Keyboard command: Enter the keyboard command displayed next to the style
sheet name in the Style Sheets palette. Keyboard equivalents are assigned in
the Edit Character Style Sheet dialog box.

å

When you apply a style sheet to a paragraph that has No Style applied to it,
local paragraph and character attributes are replaced by those specified in
the style sheet you apply.
If you want to remove local formatting as you apply a new style sheet, press
Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) as you click the style sheet name in the
Style Sheets palette.

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E D I T I N G , D U P L I C AT I N G , A N D D E L E T I N G S T Y L E S H E E T S

The Style Sheets dialog box (Edit menu) lets you edit, duplicate, and delete a
document’s paragraph and character style sheets. Select a paragraph or character
style sheet in the list and click one of these buttons:
• Edit opens the style sheet so you can modify it.
• Duplicate creates a copy of the style sheet that you can rename and modify.
• Delete removes the style sheet from the list and lets you choose a replacement style sheet for all instances of the deleted style sheet, if it is used in
the current document.
After you modify the style sheets used in a document, the text will
update accordingly.
å

To delete unused style sheets in your document, you can choose Edit & Style
Sheets and choose All Unused Style Sheets from the Show pop-up menu. Then
you can select the style sheets in the list and click Delete.
To compare two existing style sheets, choose Edit & Style Sheets. Shift-click to
select two consecutive items or C+click (Mac OS) or Ctrl+click (Windows) to
select two nonconsecutive items. Press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) to
change the Append button to Compare. Click Compare to display a summary
of each component; the differences display in bold. You can also compare two
style sheets in the Description field of the File & Append dialog box.

APPENDING STYLE SHEETS

Using the Append feature, you can import paragraph and character style sheets
from other documents rather than recreating them.

1 Choose Edit & Style Sheets (Shift+F11).
2 Click Append.
3 Locate and select the document with the style sheets you want to append
(the source document), then click Open.

4 The Available column of the Append Style Sheets dialog box lists all the character and paragraph style sheets from the source document. Select the style
sheets you want to import into the active document and double-click them, or
click the arrow button ‡ to move them to the Including column. Or, click
Include All. The Description lists display all attributes associated with selected
style sheets.

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To select one style sheet, click it. To select consecutive style sheets, press Shift
while you click press Shift while you click the first and last items in the range.
To select nonconsecutive style sheets, press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows)
while you click each one.

In the Available column, select paragraph and character style sheets to append to the active
document. Press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) to select nonconsecutive style sheets.

5 Click OK. An alert warns you that appended style sheets and lists will include all
embedded style sheets, hyphenation and justification specifications, colors, and
dashes and stripes, and ask you want to append. Click OK, then click Save to
close the Style Sheets dialog box.
∫

If a style sheet from the source document has the same name as a style sheet
in the target document, but is defined differently, the Append Conflict dialog
box displays. See the next section for information about resolving style sheet
name conflicts.
If you append a style sheet with keyboard equivalent that is already used by
a style sheet in the active document, the appended style sheet will not have
a keyboard equivalent. You can assign a new one using the Edit Style Sheet
dialog box. (Edit & Style Sheets & [select style sheet] & Edit button)

å

You can also access the Append dialog box from the File menu (File & Append).

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R E S O LV I N G S T Y L E S H E E T C O N F L I C T S

The Append Conflict dialog box provides options for handling imported style
sheets that have the same name, but different specifications, as existing style
sheets. The Existing and New lists display descriptions of the style sheets to
help you make decisions on how to handle the conflict.

Use the buttons in the Append Conflict dialog box to resolve name conflicts when appending
style sheets.

• Rename: Click Rename to display a dialog box that lets you rename the style
sheet. Enter a new name for the style sheet and click OK.
• Auto-Rename: Click Auto-Rename to have QuarkXPress place an asterisk in
front of the appended style sheet’s name.
• Use New: Click Use New to have the appended style sheet overwrite the existing style sheet.
• Use Existing: Click Use Existing to prevent the appended style sheet from
replacing the existing style sheet; the existing style sheet remains unchanged
in the document.
If you want all style sheets with conflicting names to be handled the same way,
check Repeat For All Conflicts. For example, if you want to rename all conflicting style sheets, check Repeat for All Conflicts, then click Rename. This check
box applies to the current document only.
å

You can define style sheets in ASCII text using XPress Tag codes. When you
import an ASCII text file with a style sheet defined by XPress Tag codes,
QuarkXPress imports the style sheets, including the attributes and formats
specified by XPress Tag codes, to the document. For information about
XPress Tags, see “XPress Tags” in the “Appendices.”

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POSITIONING TEXT IN TEXT BOXES P
A text baseline is the invisible line on which most characters sit. In QuarkXPress, you
can lock text baselines to an invisible, underlying horizontal grid (shown with View &
Show Baseline Grid). Locking paragraphs to the baseline grid lets you align baselines
from column to column and from box to box, across a page and across spreads. You can
also align text vertically within text boxes, specify the space between vertically justified
paragraphs, and choose the distance that the characters are inset from the inside edge
of a text box.
SPECIFYING THE BASELINE GRID

To define a document’s underlying baseline grid:

1 Choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences; then click Paragraph in the list on
the left (C+Option+Y on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+Y on Windows).

2 Enter a value between 0" and 13.889" in the Start field of the Baseline Grid area
to specify how far down from the top of the page you want to place the first line
of the grid.

3 Enter a value in the Increment field to specify the vertical distance between
the grid lines.

4 Click OK.
L O C K I N G PA R A G R A P H S T O T H E B A S E L I N E G R I D

To lock selected paragraphs to the grid you defined in the Preferences dialog
box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences & Paragraph pane):

1 Choose Style & Formats (C+Shift+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+F on Windows).
2 Check Lock to Baseline Grid.
• Lines in paragraphs that are locked to the baseline grid are spaced in multiples of
the grid’s Increment value in the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences &
Preferences & Paragraph pane).
• To lock paragraphs to the grid without disrupting the line spacing in your document, specify a grid Increment value equal to (or a multiple of) the leading of
the paragraphs you plan to lock to the grid. For example, if your body copy is
set on 12 points of leading, enter an Increment value of 12 pt.

3 Click OK.

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∫

If a paragraph’s leading is greater than the baseline grid Increment value
specified in the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences &
Paragraph pane), each line of text will lock to the next available grid increment. For example, on a 12-point grid, lines in paragraphs with 13 points
of leading will lock to every other grid line, resulting in 24 points of space
between baselines.

WORKING WITH THE FIRST BASELINE

You can specify where the first baseline of text is positioned, in relation to the
top inside edge of the text box, by using controls in the Text tab of the Modify
dialog box (Item & Modify).
The First Baseline area lets you specify the minimum distance between the text
inset at the top edge of a text box and the first text baseline. The Minimum
pop-up menu provides three options for specifying this distance. You can specify
that the first line be positioned based on the tallest character’s cap height, on
the tallest character’s cap height plus the vertical space needed for an accent
mark, or on the tallest character’s ascent.
When positioning the first line of text in a box, QuarkXPress uses whichever is
larger — the Offset distance (as measured from the top inside edge of a text
box) or the Minimum pop-up menu setting you choose (as measured from
the box’s text inset).
SPECIFYING THE FIRST BASELINE FOR TEXT BOXES

To specify the first baseline position for an active text box:

1 Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on Windows); then click
the Text tab.

Specify the First Baseline in the Text tab of the Modify dialog box (Item & Modify).

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2 To specify the distance between the first text baseline in the box and the top
inside edge of the box, enter a value in the Offset field.

3 To specify the minimum distance between the first text baseline in an active text
box and the text inset at the top edge of a text box, choose an option from the
Minimum pop-up menu.
• Cap Height is equal to the height of a zero (0) in the font of the largest character on the first line of text.
• Cap + Accent is equal to the height of a zero (0) in the font of the largest
character on the first line of text plus the extra vertical space needed for an
accent mark over an uppercase character in that font.
• Ascent is equal to the height of the ascenders (as specified by the font designer)
in the font of the largest character on the first line of text.

4 To preview your changes before making them permanent, press the Apply
button; then click OK.
∫

When you choose Centered as the Vertical Alignment option, lines of text are
centered between the First Baseline position and the bottom of the text box.
When you choose Bottom, the top baseline cannot be closer to the top of the
box than the First Baseline position you specify. When you choose Justified,
the first line of text is positioned at the First Baseline, the last line is positioned
at the bottom of the box, and the remaining lines are justified between them.

A L I G N I N G T E X T V E RT I C A L LY

QuarkXPress gives you four options for positioning lines of text vertically within
text boxes: Top, Centered, Bottom, and Justified. To align text vertically in
an active text box with one of these four options:

1 Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on Windows); then click the
Text tab.

Specify vertical alignment for text in the Text tab of the Modify dialog box.

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2 To specify the alignment you want, choose one of the four alignment options
from the Type pop-up menu in the Vertical Alignment area: Top, Centered,
Bottom, or Justified.
• Top: In top-aligned text boxes, lines of text are positioned in the box with the
top of the first line positioned as specified in the First Baseline area. The box is
filled from top to bottom as text is entered.
• Centered: In center-aligned text boxes, lines of text are centered between the
First Baseline’s ascent and the bottom of the text box. The box is filled from
the center as text is entered.
• Bottom: In bottom-aligned text boxes, lines of text are positioned with the last
line flush with the bottom of the box. The box is filled from bottom to top as
text is entered.
• Justified: In justified text boxes, lines of text are positioned in the box with the
first line positioned as specified in the First Baseline area, the last line flush with
text inset at the bottom of the box, and the remaining lines justified between.
When vertically justifying text, you can specify the maximum vertical distance
that QuarkXPress will place between paragraphs.

3 Click OK.
∫

The Centered, Bottom, and Justified alignment options are only intended for
rectangular text areas, and can be disrupted by obstructing items.

S P E C I F Y I N G I N T E R ¶ M A X VA L U E

The Inter ¶ Max field lets you specify the amount of space QuarkXPress
can insert between vertically justified paragraphs. This field is available
only when Justified is selected in the Type pop-up menu. To specify this
for selected paragraphs:

1 Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on Windows); then
click the Text tab.

2 Choose Justified from the Type pop-up menu.
3 To specify the maximum amount of space QuarkXPress can insert between
vertically justified paragraphs, enter a value in the Inter ¶ Max field.
• If vertically justified paragraphs are spaced as far apart as the Inter ¶ Max field
allows and text still does not extend from the top of the box to the bottom,
QuarkXPress will override the leading values and insert an equal amount of
additional space between lines.
• QuarkXPress can insert additional space between paragraphs up to the
Inter ¶ Max value when vertically justifying text. If the Inter ¶ Max value is
not sufficient to vertically justify the lines in a column of text, QuarkXPress

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distributes the remaining space evenly between the lines of text, including
the space between the last line of one paragraph and the first line of the
paragraph below it.
• If you enter 0 (zero) in the Inter ¶ Max field, QuarkXPress distributes space
evenly between lines and paragraphs when vertically justifying lines of text.

4 Click OK.
∫

The Inter ¶ Max value is a measurement of the amount of space that can
be inserted between paragraphs to justify the box. If this space is not large
enough to justify, then (and only then) should you add space between all
lines (including between paragraphs).

SPECIFYING TEXT INSET

Text inset lets you specify the distance that characters are inset from the inside
edge of a text box. You can specify that text be inset the same distance from all
four sides of the active box, or you can specify a different inset for each side.
To specify the text inset for an active text box:

1 Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on Windows); then click
the Text tab.

2 To specify the same inset for all four sides, leave Multiple Insets unchecked
and then enter a number in the All Edges field.

To specify a single text inset for all four sides of the active text box, leave Multiple Insets
unchecked in the Text tab of the Modify dialog box.

3 To specify different insets for the four sides, check Multiple Insets and then
enter numbers in the Top, Left, Bottom, and Right fields.

4 Click OK.

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PRINCIPLES OF WEB TYPOGRAPHY W
Web typography is just as challenging, if not more so, than print typography. Not
only do you have to choose appealing page layout, you have to consider font availability, download speeds, and monitor sizes. Should you create text boxes that only
use HTML-supported features? Should you use a standard QuarkXPress box and
convert it to a graphic?
Fortunately, QuarkXPress lets you create Web documents with text boxes that use
only HTML-supported features as well as text boxes that use standard QuarkXPress
typographic features, so you can combine them to meet your needs. This section discusses the principles of Web typography and how to balance HTML and raster text
boxes, which are text boxes that will be converted to graphics when you export your
Web document. (To create Web documents, see Chapter 3, “Document Basics,” or
Chapter 7, “Document Layout.”)
P R I N T A N D W E B D O C U M E N T C O N S I D E R AT I O N S

When you’re designing for print, you have some advantages that you don’t
have on the Web. Since typefaces are displayed the way they were designed,
instead of being approximated at 72 dpi, you can rest assured that people are
seeing the fonts you intended them to see. You can take advantage of advanced
features such as kerning, tracking, and automatic hyphenation. Printed text is
easier to read than text on a screen, so articles can be longer. Pictures can have
an astonishing degree of detail and realism without taking a long time to
download. You can also lay out pages with absolute precision.
On the other hand, HTML has some advantages of its own. Text can be enlarged
or reduced to fit the preferences of the reader, and windows can be made wider
or narrower to accommodate different-sized monitors. Dynamic elements such
as rollovers make Web pages more interactive, and hyperlinks make it easy for
readers to get additional information about a product or concept at the click of a
button. Because text is stored in electronic format, you can use search software
to find key phrases quickly and easily. And where the print on a page is stuck
to that page, the content of a Web page can be displayed on a wide variety of
devices, from desktop to palmtop, and even on appliances and cellular phones.
CONTROLLING THE APPEARANCE OF WEB DOCUMENTS

Even with these advantages, when you’re creating Web documents, fonts
become an even greater concern. Not only are typefaces approximated at 72 dpi,
but if readers don’t have the fonts you used, they probably won’t be seeing the
page as you designed it. Since you are unable to control which fonts each reader
has, you have to find a solution.
For instance, you can use whatever fonts you want and accept the fact that
they will probably be substituted, and that different viewers would see different
versions of your Web page. However, you likely want some degree of control

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over the appearance of your Web pages, especially if it is important to maintain
a corporate identity or a look that is familiar and reassuring to your audience.
So why not just turn all your text boxes into raster text boxes (pictures)? That
way, the fonts would no longer be an issue, and your page would look the same
to everyone.
Turning all your text boxes into raster text boxes would indeed maintain the
look of your page, but it would also dramatically increase the download time for
the viewer. If you already have a page with many pictures, the download time
will be increased even further. If viewers have to wait too long to download your
page, chances are that they’ll give up in frustration.
To maintain some control over the look of your page and an acceptable
download time, you’ll probably have to make some design compromises. One
approach would be to turn page headers and some navigational links (text
you click on to load a new page) into raster text boxes, and use a “standard”
font for the rest of the text. A standard font is one that most users have, such
as Times, Helvetica, Arial, or Courier. If you choose a nonstandard font, it is
more likely that your reader won’t have it, and your page will not display as
you envisioned it.
Maybe this solution doesn’t meet your needs — it might be more important to
you that your company name is in a certain font, or that certain paragraphs
of text use standard QuarkXPress typography. You might need to use text on a
path or in a Bézier box. The important thing is that you choose carefully which
items you turn into raster text boxes
F I X E D A N D VA R I A B L E PA G E W I D T H S

Of course, you need to know the page size you’ll be using before you start
adding any boxes at all. What page size to use depends on a number of factors.
Again, you generally have no control over the size of your audience’s monitors,
making it more difficult to decide on a page size.
You can choose a fixed page size, such as 800x600 pixels. The advantage is
that page elements are always in the same place. The disadvantage is that if
the viewer’s monitor or browser window is too small (or too large), viewers
will spend a lot of time scrolling or resizing the page, and design elements
may be cut off or hidden.
If you choose a variable width page size, you can create a page with HTML text
boxes that resize based on the width of the user’s browser window. This is useful
when you don’t know what size the viewer’s monitor or browser window will
be, but means that HTML text boxes will change size, which might be undesirable for your design.

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TESTING YOUR WEB DOCUMENTS

Once you choose which items you want to convert to raster text boxes, you
can export your page and test it in different browsers. If it’s possible, testing it
on different computers and at different download speeds will give you a good
idea of what most of your viewers are going to encounter. This is an excellent
opportunity to make adjustments to reach a happy medium. For instance, if
your page downloads too slowly using a 28K modem, but at a reasonable speed
using a 50K modem, maybe you can change a few raster text boxes to HTML
text boxes, or reduce the number of pictures in the page. Or if you realize that
some important text looks fine on a computer with that font installed, but horrible on a computer without that font, you can turn that HTML text box into a
raster text box. (For information about HTML text boxes and raster text boxes,
including limitations of HTML text boxes, see “HTML Text Boxes and Raster
Text Boxes” in this chapter.)
Since Web typography is largely a matter of judgment, these suggestions are not
meant to be rigid rules, but factors to take into consideration when designing
and creating your Web documents.

HTML TEXT BOXES AND RASTER TEXT BOXES W
HTML text boxes are the default text box type in a Web document. HTML text boxes
must be rectangular (or square). Any other shape of text box will automatically be
changed to a raster text box. (To create text boxes, see Chapter 4, “Box Basics.”)
Raster text boxes are HTML text boxes that will be converted to a picture when you
export your Web document as HTML. Raster text boxes allow you to use formatting
that is not supported by HTML, but they also increase the size of your page and the
page’s download time. To convert an HTML text box to a raster text box, choose
Item & Modify and check Convert to Graphic on Export. (To make the HTML
text box a variable width box, check Make Variable Width in the Text tab.)
You can format text in an HTML text box using the same controls and techniques as for text boxes in a print document. (For information about those
controls and techniques, see the preceding Psections in this chapter).
However, the following features are not available in HTML text boxes:
• Forced or Justified alignment
• Hyphenation and justification specifications (H&Js)
• Lock to Baseline Grid
• Tabs
• First Baseline and Inter-Paragraph Max settings
• Baseline Shift
• Kerning and tracking

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• Horizontal and Vertical Scale
• Outline, Shadow, Small Caps, Superior, and Word Underline type styles
• Flip Horizontal and Flip Vertical
• Text Angle
If you want to use any of these settings in an HTML text box, choose Item &
Modify and check Convert to Graphic on Export to convert the HTML text
box to a raster box.
Q U A R K X P R E S S F E AT U R E S N O T S U P P O RT E D B Y H T M L

The Edit Style Sheets dialog box (Edit menu) will display an asterisk next to
any settings in that dialog box that are not available for an HTML text box;
however, this does not mean that only features marked with an asterisk are
not supported by HTML. There are other QuarkXPress features that are not
supported by HTML:
• HTML text boxes cannot be rotated. If you want to rotate a text box, select the
text box, choose Item & Modify and check Convert to Graphic on Export.
• HTML text boxes can contain columns, but the columns will be converted to
an HTML table when the Web document is exported.
• You can dynamically resize an HTML text box and its text, but only if you resize
it proportionally. You cannot disproportionately resize an HTML text box.
• You cannot use fractional point sizes for text in an HTML text box.
• If items are placed in front of an HTML text box, and the items exceed the area
of the HTML box, the HTML text box will act as though the runaround of the
items in front were set to None, regardless of their actual runaround settings.
However, if the items placed in front of the HTML text box fall within the area
of the HTML box, the text in the HTML text box will run around the items
(assuming the items have a runaround other than None). The runaround will be
based on the bounding boxes of the items rather than the items themselves; for
example, if the item’s runaround is set to Same as Clipping, the text will not
run around the clipping path.
• You cannot link HTML text boxes across pages.
• Lines, Bézier and freehand boxes, or any boxes that are not rectangular, will be
converted to raster boxes.
• All text paths will be automatically converted to raster boxes.
• Skewed text is not supported in an HTML text box, but is allowed in a raster box.
• If the following characters are entered in an HTML text box, they will be converted to standard spaces when the document is exported: nonbreaking spaces,
em, en and flex spaces; punctuation spaces and tabs.
• The following characters cannot be entered in an HTML text box: Indent Here,
discretionary hyphen, nonbreaking hyphen, discretionary new line.

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Chapter 10: Graphics in Typography
If you think text is just words, think again. Although text can be used by itself, it
can also be used with graphics, or even as a graphic element. For example, you can
wrap body text around and through graphics, or curve a headline on an invisible
path. In cases like these, the frontier between graphics and typography blurs. This
chapter will help you conquer that frontier.
QuarkXPress lets you control the interaction between text and graphics to an
exacting degree. You can stick to the basics, such as adjusting runaround or
converting text to boxes, or try more advanced effects such as text paths and textshaped picture boxes. Whenever you need your text to be more than mere words,
QuarkXPress has the tools you need.

CONVERTING TEXT TO BOXES
You can convert a character or group of characters into a Bézier picture box using
the Text to Box command (Style menu). After you convert text to a Bézier picture
box, you can apply blends and import pictures into it, and it can be manipulated
like any other Bézier item.
C O N V E RT I N G T E X T T O B O X E S

To convert text to a Bézier picture box, select an individual character or a line of
text with the Content tool E and choose Style & Text to Box. A single Bézier
picture box, shaped like the selected characters, is created.

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Use the Text to Box command (Style menu) when a single character or line of text is selected
to create a text-shaped Bézier picture box.

∫

On Mac OS, the Text to Box command can convert Type 1 fonts with Adobe
Type Manager (ATM) installed. On Windows, the Text to Box command can
convert Type 1 fonts installed through ATM. On Mac OS and Windows, the
Text to Box command can convert TrueType fonts into a Bézier picture box.

å

By default, the Text to Box command creates an unanchored Bézier picture
box. To replace the selected text with an anchored Bézier picture box, press
Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) before choosing Style & Text to Box.
The Text to Box conversion looks best with 36-point or larger display type,
but it works with smaller text, too.

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å

The Text to Box conversion results in a Bézier outline of the selected text.
However, not all font attributes are included in the outline. For example, if
you have shadowed or underlined text, the outline will not include those
attributes. The only attributes an outline will include are bold and italics.

Create an unanchored Bézier picture box in the shape of the text using the Text to Box
command (Style menu). The box can be filled with color, blends, pictures, or text. You
can also manipulate and reshape the picture box, just as with other Bézier items.

Import a picture into a text-shaped Bézier picture box.

∫

For information about moving or reshaping Bézier boxes, as well as coloring,
framing, or resizing boxes, see Chapter 4, “Box Basics.”

å

If you want to fill your Bézier picture box with text, or simply with color,
choose Item & Content; then choose either Text or None. To convert it
back into a picture box again, choose Picture from the Content submenu.
Any contents will be lost in the conversion.
To create individual Bézier boxes out of each letter from a converted range
of selected text, choose Item & Split & Outside Paths. To create individual Bézier boxes from each shape within a single, complex text box, choose
Item & Split & All Paths. To split boxes, see “Merging and Splitting Boxes”
in Chapter 4, “Box Basics.”

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RUNNING TEXT AROUND ITEMS
The QuarkXPress text runaround feature lets you control the way text runs
behind, around, or within items and pictures. You can specify text to run around
the actual item, or you can create custom runaround paths and then manually
modify them.

Create custom runaround paths, like the one above, using QuarkXPress runaround options.
To run text around all sides of an item, first select the text box and check Run Text Around
All Sides in the Text tab (Item & Modify).
RUNNING TEXT AROUND ALL SIDES OF AN ITEM P

Text runaround defaults to running around three sides of an item. To force text
to run around all sides of an item:

1 Select a text box with either the Content tool E or the Item tool e.
2 Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on Windows); then click
the Text tab.

3 Check Run Text Around All Sides to run the text around all sides of an
obstructing item. Click OK.

Uncheck Run Text Around All Sides (Item & Modify & Text tab) and text only runs around
three sides of an item (left). When checked, text runs around all sides of an item (right).

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å

This feature is labeled P. However, you can use it in a Web document, as long as
it is applied to text in a box for which the Convert to Graphic on Export check
box is checked.
Whether text runs around three sides or all sides of an item is determined by the
text box, and not by the items that obstruct the text. This is the only runaround
control in QuarkXPress that acts on the text box itself. All other QuarkXPress
runaround controls act on the item(s) placed in front of the text box.
When a line of text falls immediately below an obstruction in a column or
box, you can place the baseline of a line of text according to its applied leading
value by checking Maintain Leading (Edit & Preferences & Preferences &
Paragraph pane). When Maintain Leading is unchecked, the ascent of the line
will abut the bottom of the item or any applied Outset value.
The Runaround tab (Item menu) is not available for groups or multipleselected items.

R U N N I N G T E X T A R O U N D L I N E S A N D T E X T PAT H S

To specify text runaround for lines and text paths in front of a text box, first
select the line or text path; then choose Item & Runaround (C+T on Mac OS,
Ctrl+T on Windows). Choose an option from the Type pop-up menu:
• Choose None to run text behind an active line or text path.
• Choose Item to run text around an active line or text path. If you have an
active text path, the text will only run around the path, not the text on the
path. Modifying any aspect of the line or text path will automatically update
the runaround area.
• Choose Manual to run text around an active line or text path. Choosing
Manual makes the Runaround path available for editing. You can move or
rotate the line or text path, but if you modify other aspects of the line or text
path, the runaround will not update (as it does when Item is chosen). You
must manually update the runaround path. To update the runaround path,
see “Fine-tuning the runaround path” later in this chapter.

Choose Item & Runaround; then choose Item from the Type pop-up menu to run text
around an active text path. The text runs around the path, not the text on the path (left).
To run text around the text on a path, select Manual from the Type pop-up menu, and
then edit the path (right).

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HTML does not support the rotation of pictures, and browsers currently
only support two types of pictures: GIF and JPEG. To accommodate these
limitations, QuarkXPress re-creates a rotated or nonrectangular item as a
picture with a rectangular, nonrotated bounding box. Therefore, text in an
HTML text box runs around the bounding box of a non-rectangular or
rotated foreground object.
If, on the other hand, the foreground object is rectangular and has not been
rotated, text in an HTML text box runs around the edges of the foreground
object itself rather than around the bounding box. W

A text path with an Item runaround of 4 pts (above) will create an HTML runaround that is four
points outside the rectangular “canvas area” of the text path (below).

∫

You can specify a runaround Outset value when either Item or Manual is
chosen from the Type pop-up menu. Positive values result in runaround that
is further from the original setting, negative values decrease the amount of
item displayed.

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∫

When the background box is an HTML text box, its text will run around the
foreground object only if the bounding box of the foreground object is completely contained within the boundaries of the background box. W

å

If you have specified a content of None for a box (Item & Content), and want
to specify a runaround, treat the box as you would a text box.
To set default runaround specifications for an item creation tool, choose Edit &
Preferences & Preferences, and click Tools in the list on the left. Select a
specific tool, click Modify, and set its default values for Runaround.

RUNNING TEXT AROUND TEXT BOXES

To specify text runaround for a text box in front of another text box, first select
the front text box; then choose Item & Runaround (C+T on Mac OS, Ctrl+T
on Windows). Choose an option from the Type pop-up menu:
• Choose None to run text behind an active text box.
• Choose Item to run text around an active text box. If the text box is rectangular,
enter values in the Top, Left, Bottom, and Right fields to outset or inset the
runaround area. If the text box is not rectangular, a single Outset field is
provided. Modifying any aspect of the text box will automatically update
the runaround area.

Choose None from the Type submenu (Item & Runaround) to run text behind a text box (left),
or choose Item to run text around a text box (right).

HTML does not support the rotation of pictures, and browsers currently
only support two types of pictures: GIF and JPEG. To accommodate these
limitations, QuarkXPress re-creates a rotated or nonrectangular item as a
picture with a rectangular, nonrotated bounding box. Therefore, text in an
HTML text box runs around the bounding box of a non-rectangular or
rotated foreground object.

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If, on the other hand, the foreground object is rectangular and has not been
rotated, text in an HTML text box runs around the edges of the foreground
object itself rather than around the bounding box. W

A rotated foreground text box with an Item runaround of 1 pt (above) will create an
HTML runaround that is one point outside the rectangular “canvas area” of the rotated
text box (below).

∫

When the background box is an HTML text box, its text will run around
the foreground object only if the bounding box of the foreground object is
completely contained within the boundaries of the background box. W

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å

Runaround paths force text to abut and run around the “included” areas of a
path. Runaround paths tell QuarkXPress where to wrap text, and clipping paths
tell QuarkXPress which parts of your picture are visible. You are not limited to
using the same settings for runaround and clipping paths. You can even use
different clipping paths or alpha channels for your clipping and runaround settings. To work with clipping paths, see “Creating and Editing Clipping Paths”
in Chapter 11, “Pictures.”

RUNNING TEXT AROUND PICTURE BOXES

To specify text runaround for picture boxes in front of a text box, first select
the picture box; then choose Item & Runaround (C+T on Mac OS, Ctrl+T on
Windows). Choose an option from the Type pop-up menu:
• Choose None to run text behind an active picture box.
• Choose Item to run text around the picture box. If the picture box is rectangular, enter values in the Top, Left, Bottom, and Right fields to outset or inset
the runaround area. If the picture box is not rectangular, a single Outset field is
provided. Modifying any aspect of the picture box will automatically update
the runaround area.

Choose Item & Runaround; then choose Item from the Type pop-up menu to run text
around the picture box.

• Choose Auto Image to create a clipping and runaround path in one step.
This clipping path, which is based on nonwhite areas in the picture file, is
created from the high-resolution image and uses Bézier curves. Text will wrap
around this path automatically. Because Auto Image runaround creates a
noneditable clipping path and runaround shape, Item & Edit & Clipping
will be disabled. P

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• Choose Picture Bounds to run text around the rectangular “canvas area” of the
imported picture file. This includes any white background areas saved with your
original picture file. Enter values in the Top, Left, Bottom, and Right fields to
determine the outset or inset of the text from the picture’s boundaries. Negative
values result in an inset, positive values in an outset. P

View the Preview area (Item & Runaround) to see how text runs around the picture bounds
(the larger outline, left). The picture’s frame is showing in the picture at right, but the larger
white space surrounding the picture is the “canvas-area” of the picture bounds.

å

The magenta path in the Preview area (Item & Runaround) represents the
runaround path, and the blue outline represents the item. To change these
default colors, choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences; then click Display
in the list on the left to show the Display pane. Double-click either the Grid
color or the Margin color to change the runaround path or item outline
colors, respectively.
• Choose Embedded Path to run text around a path that has been embedded in
an image. Choose an embedded path from the Path pop-up menu if the picture
file contains more than one embedded path. P

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View an embedded path in the Preview area by choosing Embedded Path from the Type
pop-up menu (left). Embedded paths often outline the picture’s subject, which causes text
to run flush around the subject (right).

• Choose Alpha Channel to run text around an alpha channel that has been
embedded in an image. Choose an alpha channel from the Alpha pop-up menu
if the picture file contains more than one embedded alpha channel. P

å

Image editing applications are capable of embedding paths and alpha
channels in an image. If a picture storing this information is imported into
a QuarkXPress document, you can access the path and channel information
using the Runaround tab in the Modify dialog box (Item menu). QuarkXPress
can scan the paths and channels and create a QuarkXPress text runaround path
based on the information.
Alpha channels are saved in image editing applications. They are selections
(not paths) that are created as 8-bit masks. An alpha channel masks or hides
unwanted portions of an image, and the mask is used to define the text
runaround area. QuarkXPress can use embedded alpha channel information
to define a clipping path, but does not support the partial transparency that
an 8-bit mask can contain.
The Information area in the Runaround tab contains statistics on the
number of Alpha Channels and Embedded Paths included with the original
picture file.

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• Choose Non-White Areas to create a runaround path based on the picture’s
subject. Depending on the value in the Threshold field, the runaround path
will outline a dark figure within a larger white or near-white background
(or vice versa). P

Run text around a dark image that contains a light background by choosing Non-White Areas
from the Type pop-up menu (Item & Runaround).

å

The Non-White Areas option works best when the unwanted parts of the
image are much lighter than the image itself (or vice versa). If you are using a
grayscale or color image that has a similar tonal value throughout the picture,
QuarkXPress will have a difficult time reading the subject’s outline, and will not
be able to create a very accurate runaround path.
• Choose Same As Clipping to set the text runaround path to the clipping path
selected in the Clipping tab (Item menu).

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HTML does not support the rotation of pictures, and browsers currently only
support two types of pictures: GIF and JPEG. To accommodate these limitations,
QuarkXPress re-creates a rotated or nonrectangular item as a picture with a rectangular, nonrotated bounding box. Therefore, text in an HTML text box runs
around the bounding box of a non-rectangular or rotated foreground object.
If, on the other hand, the foreground object is rectangular and has not been
rotated, text in an HTML text box runs around the edges of the foreground
object itself rather than around the bounding box. W

A non-rectangular picture with a Same As Clipping runaround of 1 pt (above) will create
an HTML runaround that is one point outside the rectangular “canvas area” of the rotated
text box (below).

∫

When the background box is an HTML text box, its text will run around
the foreground object only if the bounding box of the foreground object is
completely contained within the boundaries of the background box. W

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F I N E - T U N I N G T H E R U N A R O U N D PAT H

When Auto Image, Embedded Path, Alpha Channel, Non-White Areas, or
Same As Clipping is chosen in the Type pop-up menu (Item & Runaround),
various fields become available that let you manipulate the runaround path.
Enter values in the fields to modify the path.

1 Enter values in the Outset field to change the size of the runaround path. Positive values result in a runaround path that is further from the original setting,
negative values decrease the amount of image included in the runaround path.

Enter values in the Outset field to outset or inset the runaround path (Item & Runaround). For
example, a 0-point outset results in text running flush around the subject (left), while a 10-point
outset results in a larger runaround path.

2 Enter values in the Noise field to identify which paths should be deleted and
which paths should be included when creating the runaround path (see the
accompanying tip). The Noise field specifies the smallest allowable closed path.
Any closed path smaller than the noise value will be deleted. Noise values are
useful for cleaning up runaround paths and making them easier to output.
å

A runaround path is capable of containing many paths. For example, if you
have a picture of two bagels and a scattering of crumbs (and your Runaround
tab settings are set to render this scenario), a QuarkXPress runaround path
could show two magenta paths around the two bagels, two magenta paths
around the bagel holes, and a plethora of tiny magenta paths around the
crumbs. All of these paths are considered to be one runaround path. To delete
the tiny crumb paths, enter a value in the Noise field that corresponds to
their diameters (such as “5 pt”), and any path in the graphic that is narrower
than 5 points will be removed.

3 Enter values in the Smoothness field to specify runaround path accuracy.
A lower value creates a more complex path with a greater number of points.
A higher value creates a less accurate path. This is similar to the flatness setting
in many image editing applications.

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View the runaround path in the Preview area (Item & Runaround) to see what the
Smoothness tolerance looks like at different values. At 2 points (left), many points are
used to describe the runaround path; at 8 points (center), fewer points are used, but the
shape is still described relatively accurately; at 15 points (right), the shape loses its smoothness altogether. However, the text runs almost exactly the same around the “smooth” path
as it does around the “rough” path. Text runaround can be completed much faster using the
“rough” path because it is less complex.

4 Enter a value in the Threshold field to specify how QuarkXPress determines
dark pixels from light pixels. The Threshold option uses the picture to generate
a runaround path. When Non-White Areas or Auto Image is chosen, any pixel
shaded below the Threshold value is excluded from the runaround area, and
any pixel above it is included. The reverse is true for alpha channels.

Enter values in the Threshold field (Item & Runaround) to determine where the runaround
path will affect text.

∫

Threshold is only available for Non-White Areas, Auto Image, and Alpha
Channel. (You can alter the Threshold value when an alpha channel is selected
because alpha channels can be grayscale. They have gray pixels and nonwhite
areas that can be interpreted by a threshold tolerance.)

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å

The Threshold value determines how “white” is defined. All pixels defined as
“white” are excluded. For example, if the Threshold value is 20%, and a pixel’s
gray value is below or at 20%, the pixel will be considered “white” and excluded
from the runaround path.
To update any changes in the Preview area, click Apply, select a new field, or
press Tab. Pressing Tab also moves you through the fields.

C R E AT I N G S P E C I A L E F F E C T S

Various options in the Runaround tab (Item menu) let you specify whether text
runs inside, outside, or through a picture; whether text runs around a picture
box (even when an image is jutting out from its box); and whether text
runaround is cropped to the box. To create special effects:

1 Check Invert to make the outer regions of the runaround path part of the
interior and the inner regions part of the exterior. Uncheck Invert to return
the path to its previous state.

Checking Invert (Item & Runaround) allows text to run into an area that it used to run around.

å

Click Rescan (Item & Runaround) to rebuild the runaround path from
scratch based on the Runaround dialog box settings. Clicking Rescan
undoes Crop to Box.

To create a “see-through” effect, you can send an item to the back by using the Send to Back
command (Item menu), and then setting the text box background color to None.

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2 Check Outside Edges Only to make QuarkXPress select only the outer edges
of the runaround path. Uncheck Outside Edges Only to include paths that
define holes.

Check Outside Edges Only (Item & Runaround) when you want to use only the outer
edges of the runaround path (left). Create unusual text flow by unchecking Outside
Edges Only (right).

å

The Outside Edges Only check box determines whether QuarkXPress allows
holes within a path. For example, if checked, QuarkXPress will create one path
for a picture of a bagel (one for the outside edges of the bagel). Text runs around
the entire bagel. Uncheck Outside Edges Only and the bagel hole path becomes
visible, too. Text can run around the bagel and in the hole.

3 Check Restrict to Box to restrain the text runaround to the picture box.
Uncheck Restrict to Box to make the text run around portions of the magenta
runaround path that fall outside the box.

4 Click Crop to Box to ignore portions of a runaround path that fall outside the
current box borders.

Crop the runaround path to the box by clicking Crop to Box (Item & Runaround) (right).

5 Click Apply (C+A on Mac OS, Alt+A on Windows) to preview your changes;
then click OK.
E D I T I N G R U N A R O U N D PAT H S

If a runaround path requires further adjustment, you can check Runaround
(Item & Edit) to access and manipulate the runaround path. For visual distinction and ease in editing, the runaround path displays as a magenta outline.

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Select the picture box and choose Item & Edit. Check Runaround to access
and manipulate the runaround path’s points, curve handles, and line segments.
Edit the path as you would any Bézier object.

Choose Item & Edit & Runaround to access and manipulate the runaround path.

Choose Item & Edit and check Runaround to access the runaround path.

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∫

Runaround path editing is available when Picture Bounds, Embedded Paths,
Alpha Channels, or Non-White Areas is chosen in the Type pop-up menu
(Item & Runaround).

å

For information about editing Bézier shapes, as well as Bézier terminology,
see “Reshaping Boxes” in Chapter 4, “Box Basics.”
You can disable screen redraw and save time when editing a runaround path by
pressing the space bar when editing. Release the space bar to redraw the screen
and reflow text.
A QuarkXPress runaround path generated using the Runaround tab (Item menu)
is based on the high-resolution picture file. Manually editing the runaround
path requires the user to work with the low-resolution preview as the only
guide, so accuracy is not as foolproof.

C R E AT I N G T E X T PAT H S
You can create text paths by using one of the four text path tools. After you have created
a text path, you can manipulate the way text rides the path, the attributes of the text
(font, color, size, etc.), and the shape and style attributes of the path.
å

In a Web document, a text path will export as a graphic.

C R E AT I N G T E X T PAT H S

Select a text path creation tool from the Tools palette and move the Crosshair
pointer c to any position on the page; then click and drag, or click and create
points, to draw the text path. Create text paths using the following tools:
• The Line Text Path tool Ò creates straight text paths at any angle.

Create straight text paths at any angle using the Line Text Path tool Ò.

å

You can constrain a text path created with the Line Text Path tool Ò to 0°, 45°,
or 90° angles by pressing Shift while you draw or resize the text path.

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• The Orthogonal Text Path tool  creates straight horizontal or vertical
text paths.

Create straight text paths at right angles using the Orthogonal Text Path tool .

• The Bézier Text Path tool  creates text paths with curved and straight line
segments. Click to establish straight line segments; click and drag to establish
curved line segments. To end the text path, double-click while creating the last
point, or select a tool from the Tools palette.

Use the Bézier Text Path tool  to manually plot points while creating the path.

• The Freehand Text Path tool ˜ creates freehand text paths with curved line
segments. Click and drag in a continuous motion to draw a freehand path.
Release the mouse when you are finished drawing the path.

Create freehand text paths by clicking and dragging in a continuous motion.

∫

Text paths, as items, are treated exactly the same as lines. You can create, resize,
reshape, move, and apply line styles (preset or custom) to text paths just as you
would to lines. To create lines, see Chapter 5, “Line Basics.”

å

You can preset the preferences for text path creation tools by either doubleclicking a tool in the Tools palette, or using the controls in the Tools panes
(Edit & Preferences & Preferences). You can preset Style, Arrowheads,
Width, Color, Shade, and Runaround attributes of the text paths you create.

C O N T R O L L I N G T E X T O R I E N TAT I O N A N D P O S I T I O N

To control the way text rides the path, select the text path with either the Item
tool e or the Content tool E and:

1 Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on Windows); then click
the Text Path tab.

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Choose Item & Modify; then click the Text Path tab to control the way text is oriented
on its path.

2 Click a button in the Text Orientation area to choose how the text should ride
the path:
• The upper-left button is the default. Characters are rotated, but not skewed,
to sit at the angle determined by the path.

Rotate text on its path by clicking the upper-left button.

• The upper-right button produces a 3-D effect. Characters are rotated and skewed,
and sometimes flipped, to produce the effect.

Create a ribbon-like effect by clicking the upper-right button.

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• The lower-right button produces a stair-step appearance. Characters are neither
rotated nor skewed.

Create a stair-step effect by clicking the lower-right button.

• The lower-left button produces a warped appearance. Characters are skewed but
not rotated.

Create this effect by clicking the lower-left button.

å

When you select a text path with the Content tool E, the Measurements
palette displays text information; when you select a text path with the Item
tool e, the Measurements palette displays line information.

3 Choose an option from the Align Text pop-up menu to determine which part
of a font is used to position characters on the path. (The following examples of
font orientation are positioned on top of the path as determined by the Align
with Line pop-up menu. See the next page for more information about the
Align with Line pop-up menu.)
• The Ascent option uses the font’s ascenders as the place where the text
intersects the path.

Choose Ascent from the Align Text pop-up menu (Item & Modify & Text Path tab) to place
a font’s ascenders on the path.

• The Center option uses the center of the font’s x-height as the place where the
text intersects the path.

Choose Center from the Align Text pop-up menu (Item & Modify & Text Path tab) to place
a font’s center on the path.

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• The Baseline option uses the font’s baseline as the place where the text
intersects the path.

Choose Baseline from the Align Text pop-up menu (Item & Modify & Text Path) to place
a font’s baseline on the path.

• The Descent option uses the font’s descenders as the place where the text
intersects the path.

Choose Descent from the Align Text pop-up menu (Item & Modify & Text Path) to place
a font’s descenders on the path.

4 Choose an option from the Align with Line pop-up menu to determine path
orientation. Choose from Top, Center, or Bottom.

Choose Top to position the font on top of the path (left), Center to position the font in the
middle of the path (center), and Bottom to position the font on the bottom of the path (right).

∫

Depending on the line width of the path, the Top, Center, or Bottom path
orientation may make quite a visual difference.
You can flip a text path horizontally by choosing Style & Flip Text, by checking Flip Text in the Text Path tab (Item & Modify), or by clicking √ in the
Measurements palette. The Flip Text command does not produce a true flip,
but instead, places the text on the opposite side of the path, upside-down.
This is especially useful for circular text paths.

5 Click Apply (C+A on Mac OS, Alt+A on Windows) to preview your changes;
then click OK.
å

You can apply styles to text on paths the same way you apply styles to regular
text. Choose from different fonts, sizes, colors, shades, etc. To style text on a
path, see “Applying Character Attributes” in Chapter 9, “Typography.”

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C R E AT I N G I N I T I A L C A P S

T

he first letter in this sentence is an initial cap — the first letter of a paragraph that
is enlarged and embellished to draw readers into a paragraph. You can specify
automatic drop caps, create your own initial cap effects, and use imported graphics as
initial caps.
S P E C I F Y I N G A U T O M AT I C D R O P C A P S

D

rop caps are initial caps that hang two or more lines below the first line of
a paragraph (like this one). The QuarkXPress automatic drop caps feature
enlarges the drop cap characters and runs the paragraph around the drop caps
automatically. The typeface and styles match the rest of the paragraph. To
specify drop caps for a selected paragraph:

1 Choose Style & Formats (C+Shift+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+F on Windows).

Use the Drop Caps area in the Paragraph Attributes dialog box to specify automatic
drop caps (Style & Formats).

2 Check Drop Caps.
3 To specify how many characters drop, enter a value from 1 to 127 in the
Character Count field.

4 To specify the number of lines the characters are dropped, enter a value
from 2 to 16 in the Line Count field.

5 Click Apply (C+A on Mac OS, Ctrl+A on Windows) to preview your changes;
then click OK.
∫

Drop caps are measured by percentage rather than by points. When you select a
drop cap, the default size is 100%.
The baseline of an automatic drop cap is aligned with the baseline of the
line specified in the Line Count field. If a drop cap character has a descender
(a stroke that extends below the baseline), the character may obstruct lines
of text below it.

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å

To hang dropped characters to the left of a paragraph, enter the Indent Here
character by pressing C+\ (Mac OS) or Ctrl+\ (Windows) after the last drop cap.

Enter an Indent Here character ( C+\ on Mac OS, Ctrl+\ on Windows) after a drop cap to hang
a dropped character to the left of a paragraph.

To embellish automatic drop caps, select the characters in the paragraph and
apply local styles as usual. You can reposition automatic drop caps vertically
using baseline shift and horizontally using kerning.

C R E AT I N G R A I S E D I N I T I A L C A P S

Raised initial caps rise above the first line of a paragraph (like this one). They
are created by locally formatting characters at the beginning of a paragraph
using the full range of QuarkXPress styles including fonts, type styles, and
colors. To create raised initial caps:

1 Select the characters you want to raise.
2 To resize the characters, choose Style & Size; choose a font size from the submenu, or choose Other and enter a font size in the field; then click OK.

3 To format the characters, use the Style menu commands such as Font, Type
Style, and Color.

4 To edit the space between the raised initial cap and the following character,
place the Text Insertion bar I between the characters and choose Style & Kern.
Enter an amount, and click OK.
å

To prevent uneven line spacing between paragraphs with raised initial caps, use
absolute leading rather than relative leading. To specify leading, see “Specifying
Leading and Paragraph Spacing” in Chapter 9, “Typography.”

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C R E AT I N G I N I T I A L C A P S U S I N G A N C H O R E D B O X E S

U

sing anchored text boxes lets you modify the attributes of the anchored
box as well as the initial cap characters. The initial cap in this paragraph is an
anchored text box with a linear background blend. Anchored picture boxes let
you import graphics as initial caps. For step-by-step anchoring instructions,
see “Anchoring Boxes and Lines in Text” later in this chapter.
å

You can create a raised initial cap by converting a character to an anchored
Bézier picture box. Just select the character and press Option (Mac OS) or
Alt (Windows) before choosing Style & Text to Box.
You can use frames, blends, and shaded backgrounds to embellish anchored
boxes that contain initial caps. You can also resize anchored boxes to make
them fit smoothly with the other characters.

C R E AT I N G R U L E S A B O V E A N D B E L O W PA R A G R A P H S
Rules are frequently used above or below text to set off paragraphs, to indicate related
information, or just to add a graphic flair to page design. QuarkXPress lets you specify
rules as a paragraph attribute, which means you can place a rule above and/or below
selected paragraphs. With a range of paragraphs selected, the rules you specify are
placed between each paragraph in the range. When you apply rules above and/or
below text, they become part of the paragraph, so text reflow makes the rules
move with the text and keep their position.
å

When you apply a rule above or below using the Solid Shade (HR) style,
the rule is exported as an 
tag. If you apply a rule above or below using the Solid style, the rule is exported as a GIF image. W S P E C I F Y I N G R U L E S A B O V E A N D / O R B E L O W PA R A G R A P H S The Rules tab of the Paragraph Attributes dialog box (Style & Rules) lets you specify the position, size, and style of paragraph rules. To specify paragraph rules for selected paragraphs: 1 Choose Style & Rules (C+Shift+N on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+N on Windows). Chapter 10: Graphics in Typography 262 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 263 Creating Rules Above and Below Paragraphs 2 Check Rule Above to specify a rule above the first line of selected paragraphs. Check Rule Below to specify a rule below the last line of selected paragraphs. Check Rule Above or Rule Below in the Paragraph Attributes dialog box (Style & Rules) to specify horizontal rules that flow above or below selected paragraphs. 3 Choose an option from the Length pop-up menu to specify the initial length of the rule. • The Indents option specifies a rule that extends from the paragraph’s Left Indent to its Right Indent, as specified in the Formats tab (Style menu). • The Text option specifies a rule that is the same length as the first line of text in the paragraph (rule above) or the last line of text in the paragraph (rule below). 4 Enter values in the From Left and From Right fields to indent the rule further. From Left values move a rule’s left end-point. A positive number will move the end-point right; a negative number will move it left. From Right values move a rule’s right end-point. A positive number will move the end-point left; a negative number will move it right. Chapter 10: Graphics in Typography 263 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 264 Creating Rules Above and Below Paragraphs 5 Enter an absolute value or a percentage in the Offset field to specify the amount of space between a rule and the paragraph to which it is attached. • In the Rule Above area, an absolute Offset value places space between the bottom of the rule and the baseline of the first line of the paragraph. A percentage Offset value is measured up from the top of the ascenders in the paragraph’s first line of text, to the bottom of the rule. • In the Rule Below area, an absolute Offset value places space between the top of the rule and the baseline of the last line of the paragraph. A percentage Offset value is measured down from the bottom of the descenders in the paragraph’s last line of text, to the top of the rule. 6 Choose an option from the Style pop-up menu to specify a line style for the rule. 7 Choose an option from the Width pop-up menu, or enter a value in the field to specify a width. The printed width of a hairline rule is .125 point on an imagesetter. Laser printers print a wider hairline. 8 Choose an option from the Color pop-up menu to specify a color. 9 Choose an option from the Shade pop-up menu, or enter a value in the field to specify a shade. 10 Click Apply (C+A on Mac OS, Ctrl+A on Windows) to preview your changes; then click OK. å When a rule with a percentage Offset value is between two paragraphs separated by the end of a column, the rule is not placed. You can prevent two paragraphs from separating at the end of a column by checking Keep Lines Together in the Formats tab of the Paragraph Attributes dialog box (Style & Formats). Specify paragraph rules as a style sheet attribute to ensure consistent formatting among paragraphs. You can use a rule above or rule below to create reverse type that flows with text. Color the text a light color or white, then create a rule above or below with a negative absolute offset value. Click Apply to check the placement of the rule. REMOVING RULES To remove rules from selected paragraphs, choose Style & Rules. Uncheck Rule Above and Rule Below, and click OK. Chapter 10: Graphics in Typography 264 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 265 Anchoring Boxes and Lines in Text ANCHORING BOXES AND LINES IN TEXT QuarkXPress lets you paste boxes and lines of any shape in text, which makes them act like characters and flow with text. This is especially helpful when text reflows, because anchored items reflow like other characters in the text. If items are not anchored and text reflows, they become displaced, and can end up overlapping text. A is for Apple Anchor boxes in text so they act like characters and flow with text. ANCHORING BOXES AND LINES IN TEXT When you anchor an item, it behaves like a character flowing in text. To anchor an item: 1 Select the Item tool e, then select the item you want to anchor. 2 Choose Edit & Cut (C+X on Mac OS, Ctrl+X on Windows) or Copy (C+C on Mac OS, Ctrl+C on Windows) to temporarily place the item on the Clipboard. 3 Select the Content tool E and place the Text Insertion bar I where you want to anchor the item. 4 Choose Edit & Paste (C+V on Mac OS, Ctrl+V on Windows) to anchor the item at the text insertion point i. 5 Adjust the leading of the paragraph containing the anchored item as necessary to accommodate the anchored item (Style & Leading). Adjust the leading in paragraphs with anchored boxes so the boxes do not overlap the text. ∫ You cannot anchor a box or line within another anchored text box. Chapter 10: Graphics in Typography 265 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 266 Anchoring Boxes and Lines in Text å In paragraphs with auto leading, lines of text are spaced according to the largest character on each line. An anchored item that is larger than the characters in a line may cause inconsistent line spacing in the paragraph. You can import a picture into an anchored picture box, import or create text in an anchored text box, or change the content of the box by choosing an option from the Content submenu (Item menu). Modify the anchored box and its content as necessary. You can anchor a group. To group items, see “Grouping Items” in Chapter 6, “Manipulating Items.” Using the Style & Text to Box command, you can create a complex, text-shaped Bézier picture box from selected text. To anchor the box into a paragraph, press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) before choosing Style & Text to Box. C R E AT I N G A D R O P O R R A I S E D C A P E F F E C T To control how anchored items are positioned in surrounding text, select an anchored item with either the Content tool E or the Item tool e and: • Item menu: Choose Item & Modify & Box tab. In the Align with Text area, click Ascent for a drop cap or Baseline for a raised cap. If you click Baseline, enter a value in the Offset field to raise or lower the anchored item, then click OK. P is for Pear P is for Pear Specify whether anchored boxes align with either the ascent (left) or the baseline (right) of a text line. • Measurements palette: Click 5 to align the anchored item with the ascent of the text line. Click 6 to align the item with the baseline. Click the 5 or 6 icons to quickly align anchored items with either the ascent or baseline of a text line. å To “hang” an anchored item to the left of indented text, enter an Indent Here character by pressing C+\ (Mac OS) or Ctrl+\ (Windows) after the anchored item. Lines of text are indented from the position of the Indent Here character. Chapter 10: Graphics in Typography 266 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 267 Anchoring Boxes and Lines in Text RESIZING AND RESHAPING ANCHORED BOXES AND LINES Anchored items can be resized and reshaped like any other item. For specific information about resizing and reshaping items, see Chapter 4, “Box Basics” and Chapter 5, “Line Basics.” B is for Butterfly Resize anchored boxes using the Resizing pointer f. C U T T I N G , C O P Y I N G , PA S T I N G , A N D D E L E T I N G A N C H O R E D B O X E S AND LINES To cut or copy an anchored item, select the item as you would any text character and choose Edit & Cut (C+X on Mac OS, Ctrl+X on Windows) or Edit & Copy (C+C on Mac OS, Ctrl+C on Windows). To paste the anchored item elsewhere, place the Text Insertion bar I in a different location and choose Edit & Paste (C+V on Mac OS, Ctrl+V on Windows). To delete an anchored item, select it, or insert the Text Insertion bar I after it, and press Delete (Mac OS) or Backspace (Windows). ∫ If you paste an item when the Item tool e is selected, the item will not be anchored to text; it will just be pasted normally on the page. UNANCHORING BOXES AND LINES To unanchor an item, select it with the Item tool e and choose Item & Duplicate to create an unanchored copy of the item — the duplicated item will be placed on the page according to the settings in the Step & Repeat dialog box (Item menu). Then delete the anchored item from the text by selecting it with the Content tool E and pressing Delete (Mac OS) or Backspace (Windows). Chapter 10: Graphics in Typography 267 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 268 Understanding Picture File Formats Chapter 11: Pictures If ten people read the words, “A person with mysterious eyes and an enigmatic smile gazes at you,” they would imagine ten different faces. However, if they read the words, “Mona Lisa,” they would all think of the same specific image. Pictures are a powerful tool of communication, conveying information that words alone cannot. QuarkXPress lets you import pictures from image-editing or other graphic applications. Once a picture has been imported, you can modify it by altering its position, changing its size, skewing it, and more. You can even use QuarkXPress or embedded clipping paths to remove the background of the image. With these picture-handling capabilities, you can make your documents more effective and memorable. U N D E R S TA N D I N G P I C T U R E F I L E F O R M AT S Pictures are created in many ways. They are scanned, created with digital cameras, captured from video, read from CD-ROMs — even created from scratch in certain applications. Once created, they can be stored in literally dozens of different formats. QuarkXPress lets you import pictures in a variety of file formats. However, QuarkXPress can only manipulate files stored in certain formats. U N D E R S TA N D I N G B I T M A P A N D O B J E C T- O R I E N T E D P I C T U R E S Picture files come in two fundamental varieties: bitmap and object-oriented. Bitmap pictures are a grid of grayscale or color pixels that make up an image. Object-oriented pictures use X and Y coordinates to describe lines, curves, type, shading, and rotation angle (in other words, a mathematical description of how to draw an picture). Both types of picture files can be saved in a variety of formats. You can often see the difference between a bitmap picture (left), and an object-oriented picture (right). Bitmap pictures can look blocky or pixelated while object-oriented pictures always look smooth. Chapter 11: Pictures 268 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 269 Understanding Picture File Formats BITMAP PICTURES Bitmap pictures (sometimes called raster file format) are made up of individual pixels (tiny dots). The pixels line up to form a grid that is blended by the eye into a single image. All scanned pictures are bitmap pictures. Bitmap pictures can be stored in a number of different color modes, with different bit depths. Color mode describes the way colors are represented in a file; bit depth is the number of bits used to represent each pixel. Bit depth helps determine a picture’s tone, color, and detail. The simplest color mode is 1-bit (also known as “line art” or “black-and-white”). In this mode, one bit is used to describe each pixel. If a bit is on, the pixel is black; if the bit is off, the pixel is white. More complex images, such as photographs, have depth because they contain multiple-bit pixels that can describe many levels of gray or color. For example, in grayscale mode, eight bits are used to describe each pixel (bit depth = 8). This means that each pixel can be represented as a number between 0 and 255 (in binary 00000000–11111111). When a grayscale picture is displayed, the range of numbers between 0 and 255 is translated into a range of grays from 100% black to 0 black (white). Thus, each pixel in such an image can be one of 256 different shades of gray. Even though 256 levels of gray are more than the eye can perceive, including this many grays allows accurate tone reproduction and quality detail, given a high-quality output device. Dimension describes the physical size of a picture (for example, 3" × 5"). The dimensions of a picture file are determined by the application that creates it, and dimensions are stored in the picture file. Resolution is the number of pixels (dots) per inch in a picture. Resolution is dependent on dimension. In other words, if you change a picture’s dimensions, you change its resolution too. For example, consider a 72 dpi picture that’s 1" × 1". If you scale that picture to 200% in QuarkXPress, its effective resolution drops to 36 dpi, because the pixels are enlarged. Pixel depth describes how much information each pixel contains. The simplest bitmap images are 1-bit black-and-white images, like ink sketches. These 1-bit images are flat (without depth). 1-bit pictures are often flat (left), while multiple-bit images show contours using many levels of gray (right). Chapter 11: Pictures 269 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 270 Understanding Picture File Formats å Bitmap images print best if they are kept at their original size (100%) or if they are only slightly reduced. Enlarging a bitmap picture or saving it at a low dpi may make it appear blocky or pixelated. OBJECT-ORIENTED PICTURES Object-oriented pictures contain information that describes how to draw the position and attributes of geometric objects. You can then shrink, enlarge, stretch, and rotate these pictures without worrying about how they will look — object-oriented pictures look smooth, no matter what their scaled size may be. ∫ Object-oriented pictures are sometimes referred to as vector file format because they use vector (distance and direction) information to describe a shape. U N D E R S TA N D I N G F I L E T Y P E S File type refers to how picture information is formatted. Is it formatted as an EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) file? A TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) file? Dozens of graphic file formats exist, and each offers variations on how bitmap or objectoriented images are saved and can be manipulated. The following is a list of common file formats, including their main features: • DCS 2.0 (Desktop Color Separations): an EPS saved as a single file that can include process plates (cyan, magenta, yellow, black) as well as spot plates and a master image. A DCS 2.0 file is preseparated, so it prints faster than a standard EPS. The master image is used for composite printing. A DCS 2.0 file can contain bitmap and object-oriented information. The DCS 2.0 format supports bitmap, spot, and CMYK color models. DCS 1.0 — also known as “five-file format” — contains five separate files: cyan, magenta, yellow, and black plate files, as well as a master file. • EPS (Encapsulated PostScript): can contain bitmap and object-oriented information. It supports bitmap, grayscale, RGB, CMYK, spot, and indexed color models. EPS allows inclusion of embedded paths, as well as inclusion of low resolution previews for screen display and non-PostScript printing. It also allows inclusion of OPI comments. Some EPS files don’t have a preview, in which case a gray area will fill the picture box, instead of an image. “PostScript Picture” and the file’s name will display in the center of the gray box. The picture will still print to a PostScript output device. If you want to, you can go back to the original application and save the picture with a preview. Chapter 11: Pictures 270 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 271 Understanding Picture File Formats • GIF (Graphics Interchange Format): originally developed by CompuServe to transfer graphic files between computer systems. Now a popular graphic file format for Web documents. GIF supports bitmap information up to 256 colors only. • JPEG (developed by Joint Photographic Experts Group): “lossy” compression format that allows extreme compression. This popular format for graphic files can be transmitted over the Internet due to extreme compression and its ability to support 24-bit color. JPEGs contain only bitmap information. They may also require QuickTime system extension for decoding images. This format supports grayscale, RGB, and CMYK color models. Lossy compression is a method in which there is some loss of data and possibly some degradation of quality. Lossy compression often produces smaller file sizes and faster rendering than lossless compression. • PhotoCD: proprietary Kodak format, designed for storage on CD-ROMs. This format contains only bitmap information and supports grayscale, RGB, and LAB color models. • PICT: a Mac OS format based on the original QuickDraw drawing routines. PICTs contain bitmap and object-oriented information. Their bit depth is limited to one bit per pixel, but each pixel can be one of eight colors (using QuickDraw commands). • PNG (Portable Network Graphics): a bitmap file format that supports both indexed color and continuous tone color, with lossless or lossy compression. PNG is supported only by newer Web browsers. • TIFF (Tagged Image File Format): allows lossless compression if the source application supports it. TIFFs can also allow JPEG compression. TIFFs can contain bitmap and object-oriented information and support bitmap, grayscale, RGB, CMYK, and indexed color models. This format allows inclusion of embedded paths and alpha channels, as well as inclusion of OPI comments. • WMF (Windows Metafile): a Windows file format that can contain both bitmap and object-oriented information. When a Windows Metafile picture is imported into QuarkXPress on Mac OS, it is converted to a PICT. Chapter 11: Pictures 271 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 272 Understanding Picture File Formats M O D I F I A B L E P I C T U R E F I L E F O R M AT S The availability of the commands in the Style menu for pictures varies depending on the file format of the selected picture. TYPE COLOR SHADE N E G AT I V E CONTRAST HALFTONE EPS/DCS no no no no no GIF † † yes yes no Grayscale yes yes yes yes yes Color † † yes yes no no no yes yes no JPEG (*.JPG) PhotoCD PICT (*.PCT) 1-bit yes yes no no yes Grayscale yes yes yes yes yes Color no no no no no † † yes yes no yes yes yes no yes PNG TIFF (*.TIF) 1-bit Grayscale yes yes yes yes yes Color † yes yes no † Windows bitmap (*.BMP)/PCX 1-bit yes yes yes no yes Grayscale yes yes yes yes yes Color † † yes yes no no no no no no WMF † Adjustable through the Picture Contrast Specifications dialog box (Style & Contrast). IMPORTING PICTURES In QuarkXPress, you can import a picture into an active picture box by using the Get Picture feature (File menu), or by pasting a picture from the Clipboard. You can also import a picture by choosing Get Picture from the context menu. For information about context menus, see Chapter 2, “Context Menus,” in “A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview.” I M P O RT I N G P I C T U R E S To import a picture into an active picture box: Chapter 11: Pictures 272 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 273 Importing Pictures 1 Choose File & Get Picture (C+E on Mac OS, Ctrl+E on Windows). Choose File & Get Picture to select a picture for import. 2 Use the controls in the dialog box to locate and select the picture you want to import. If available, check Preview to display the picture before it is imported. 3 To import the selected picture, click Open (or double-click the picture’s name in the list). When you import a picture, the image is imported at full size, with the origin (upper left corner) in the upper left corner of the picture box’s bounding box. You may need to resize or reposition a picture after you import it to make it fit properly within its box. If a picture box appears empty after you import a picture, you can press C+Option+Shift+F (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Alt+Shift+F (Windows) to proportionally fit the picture into the box. For other methods of resizing pictures, see “Resizing Pictures” in the “Manipulating Pictures” section later in this chapter. ∫ To import a PhotoCD or PCX file, or a TIFF with LZW compression, you must have the appropriate XTensions software running. When the QuarkCMS™ or OPI QuarkXTensions software modules are running, additional tabs are added to the Get Picture dialog box. For information about the Color Management tab, see “Using Color Management” in Chapter 12, “Color.” For information about the OPI tab, see the documentation for the OPI QuarkXTensions software on the QuarkXPress CD-ROM. å QuarkXPress automatically displays a low-resolution 72 dpi preview of each imported TIFF file. This is done to keep file size down and screen redraw rate up. Usually, the screen redraw rate is fast enough to facilitate productivity, but if an image is too large, reducing the resolution of its screen preview can help. To create a 36 dpi preview of the imported file, press Shift while you click Open in the Get Picture dialog box. This does not affect the original high-resolution picture. Chapter 11: Pictures 273 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 274 Importing Pictures C O N V E RT I N G C O L O R A N D G R AY S C A L E I M A G E S U P O N I M P O RT To import a grayscale TIFF as line art (black and white), press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while clicking Open in the Get Picture dialog box. When QuarkXPress converts a grayscale image to one bit (line art), a 50 percent threshold is used; shades of gray below the threshold are converted to white, and shades of gray above the threshold are converted to black. To import a line art TIFF as a grayscale picture, press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) while clicking Open in the Get Picture dialog box. To import a color TIFF as a grayscale picture, press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while clicking Open in the Get Picture dialog box. When QuarkXPress converts a color picture to grayscale, it uses each pixel’s RGB or CMYK values to determine the pixel’s luminance, then converts that luminance value to a gray value. PA S T I N G P I C T U R E S Mac OS and Windows have a storage area called the Clipboard, where you can temporarily store cut and copied information, including pictures. You can paste pictures into your QuarkXPress document by selecting a picture box with the Content tool E and choosing Edit & Paste (C+V on Mac OS, Ctrl+V on Windows). The picture from the Clipboard will be pasted into the picture box. Windows only: If you want more control over how the object is pasted into your document, use the Paste Special command in the Edit menu. The Paste Special command lets you choose how the object will be pasted into your document by using the Microsoft Windows Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) function. OLE enables a server application to provide an object to a client application. Using a server application, such as an illustration application, you can copy a picture to the Clipboard as an object. You can then paste, paste and embed, or paste and link the object into the client application (in this case, QuarkXPress). If you want to edit the embedded or linked object later, all you have to do is double-click it with the Content tool E and the object’s server application launches so you can edit the object. For information about embedding and linking objects, see Chapter 4, “Edit Menu,” in A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview. ∫ To reduce screen redraw time, check Greek Pictures (Edit & Preferences & Preferences & General pane). All of your picture boxes will display as gray boxes (unless they are selected), which will save time as you move through your document. I N S E RT O B J E C T — W I N D O W S O N LY The Insert Object command is a function of Microsoft Windows Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) that lets you use the Insert Object dialog box (Edit menu) to create an object using a server application or retrieve an existing file. Chapter 11: Pictures 274 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 275 Importing Pictures When Create New is selected, use the Insert Object dialog box (Edit menu) to create an object using a server application (top), or to insert an existing file when Create from File is selected (bottom). • When Create New is selected, the Object Type list displays all the available server application object types. Select one and view the Result field for summary information about how the object will be inserted. Click OK to launch the server application and create an object to place in the picture box. When you do this, QuarkXPress instantly applies the changes you make in the server application to the picture box. When you are done, choose Close & Return to from the File menu in the server application. If you plan to link the object later, make sure you save the file in the server application before you exit. • When Create from File is selected, the File field displays allowing you to enter the specific location of a file to insert. If you do not know the exact location and file name of the object you want to insert, click the Browse button to search Chapter 11: Pictures 275 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 276 Importing Pictures for the file. Check Link to link the object, otherwise it will be automatically embedded. The Result field displays summary information about how the file will be inserted. å When you use the Create New option, the object you are about to create cannot be linked and will therefore be automatically embedded. This is because a linked object must have a source file, and since no source file exists yet, linking is not possible. Therefore, if you create a new object and want to link it, first create and save the object using the Create New option, then re-insert the object in the picture box using the Create from File option. S A V I N G A PA G E A S A N E P S F I L E QuarkXPress lets you save individual document pages — including all the text and graphics — as EPS files. For instance, you can use pages saved as EPS files when you need to scale a QuarkXPress page up or down for an ad or other publication. These EPS files can be imported into other QuarkXPress documents or opened in other applications. 1 Choose File & Save Page as EPS (C+Option+Shift+S on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+Shift+S on Windows). The fields in the lower half of the dialog box specify how to export the page. Use the Save Page as EPS dialog box (File menu) to export a QuarkXPress page as an EPS file. You can then import your QuarkXPress page as a picture into a QuarkXPress document or other applications. 2 Enter a page number in the Page field to specify the page you want to save as an EPS file. You must enter the complete page number, including any prefix, Chapter 11: Pictures 276 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 277 Saving A Page as an EPS File or an absolute page number. An absolute page number reflects a page’s actual position relative to the first page of a document, regardless of how the document is sectioned. To specify an absolute page number in the Page field, precede the number you enter with a plus (+) sign. For example, to display the first page in a document, enter “+1.” 3 Enter a percentage value in the Scale field to specify the dimensions of your EPS image. 4 Enter a value in the Bleed field to “expand” the EPS file’s boundaries. For example, entering a value of .25" will include .25" of any items that are .25" outside the page boundaries. If the items extend more than .25" beyond the page boundaries, only the first .25" will be included in the EPS. 5 Check Spread to generate an EPS of the entire spread where the specified page is located. 6 Check Transparent Page to make the page area transparent (the way QuarkXPress 3.x and earlier worked). If Transparent Page is unchecked, everything within the EPS file’s bounding box will be opaque (the way QuarkXPress 4.x worked). Use the Transparent Page check box (File & Save Page as EPS) to create a transparent EPS. 8 Choose a format from the Format pop-up menu. You can choose from four options: Color, B&W, DCS, and DCS 2.0. 9 From the Space pop-up menu, choose the color space in which the EPS will be exported. You can choose either CMYK or RGB. If you choose RGB, an alert dialog box will display to remind you that the resulting RGB EPS cannot be process separated. 10 Choose an option from the Preview pop-up menu to create a preview. On Mac OS, you can choose PICT or TIFF to create a screen preview, or choose None to exclude the preview. On Windows, you can choose TIFF to create a screen preview of the EPS file, or choose None to exclude the preview. 11 If your page contains bitmap (raster) data, choose an option from the Data pop-up menu to control how the data is included in the EPS. Choose from Binary, ASCII, or Clean 8-bit. (For an explanation of the options in the Data pop-up menu, see “Specifying Printing: The Print Dialog Box Tabs” in Chapter 23, “Output.” Chapter 11: Pictures 277 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 278 Saving A Page as an EPS File 12 Click the OPI pop-up menu if the page contains bitmap data in TIFF or EPS file format. Choose among Include Images, Omit TIFF, and Omit TIFF & EPS. • Choose Include Images to include all imported TIFF and EPS pictures in the exported EPS file. • Choose Omit TIFF to replace all TIFF pictures with OPI comments that can be read by an OPI server. The TIFF itself is not described in the PostScript. • Choose Omit TIFF & EPS to replace all TIFF and EPS pictures with OPI comments that can be read by an OPI server. Choose an option from the OPI pop-up menu (File & Save Page as EPS) to specify whether or not to include EPS and TIFF data in your QuarkXPress EPS page. 13 Once you have specified the information for your EPS file, name the file, and click Save. On Windows, QuarkXPress automatically selects the appropriate extension for EPS files (*.eps) in the Save as type field. ∫ The only trapping information that QuarkXPress honors in an EPS file is its overprint settings. This includes pages exported as EPS files from QuarkXPress. When the QuarkCMS, OPI, or Custom Bleeds QuarkXTensions modules are running, additional tabs are added to the Save Page as EPS dialog box. When the QuarkCMS, Custom Bleeds, or OPI QuarkXTensions modules are running, additional tabs are added to the Save Page as EPS dialog box. Chapter 11: Pictures 278 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 279 Saving A Page as an EPS File ∫ For information about the Profiles tab, see “Using Color Management” in Chapter 12, “Color.” For information about the OPI tab, see the documentation for the OPI QuarkXTensions software on the QuarkXPress CD-ROM. For information about the Bleeds tab, see the documentation for the Custom Bleeds QuarkXTensions software on the QuarkXPress CD-ROM. M A N I P U L AT I N G P I C T U R E S Once you have imported a picture into a picture box, you can manipulate it by moving, resizing, scaling, skewing, coloring, and flipping it. MOVING PICTURES Move pictures inside their picture boxes using: • The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on Windows); then click the Picture tab. Enter values in the Offset Across field to move the picture left or right, and the Offset Down field to move the picture up or down. Click OK. Use the Offset Across and Offset Down fields (Item & Modify & Picture tab) to specify a picture’s position within a picture box, relative to the box’s origin. • The Tools palette: With the Content tool E selected, click the picture and move it around inside the picture box. • The Measurements palette: Enter values in the X+ field to move the picture left or right, and the Y+ field to move the picture up or down. Chapter 11: Pictures 279 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 280 Manipulating Pictures You can also click the N and n arrows (Mac OS) or the j arrows (Windows) in the Measurements palette to move the picture in 1-point increments. Press Option while using the N and n arrows (Mac OS), or press Alt while using the j arrows (Windows) to move the picture in .1-point increments. Enter values in the X+ and Y+ fields or click the N and n arrows in the Measurements palette to move a picture inside its picture box. ç ∫ KEYBOARD COMMANDS A U T O M AT I C MAC OS M O V I N G F E AT U R E S COMMAND COMMAND Center pictures C+Shift+M Ctrl+Shift+M Nudge pictures in 1-point increments arrow keys arrow keys Nudge pictures in .1-point increments Option+ arrow keys Alt+arrow keys WINDOWS If the Item tool e is selected when you are using the arrows in the Measurements palette or the arrow keys on the keyboard, the picture box will move instead of the picture within the box. RESIZING PICTURES You can scale pictures to make them larger or smaller using: • The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on Windows); then click the Picture tab. Enter values in the Scale Across and Scale Down fields to resize the picture. Click OK. Use the Scale Across and Scale Down fields (Item & Modify & Picture tab) to enlarge or reduce the size of a picture. Chapter 11: Pictures 280 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 281 Manipulating Pictures • The Style menu: Select the picture and choose an option from the Style menu. The Center Picture option (C+Shift+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+M on Windows) centers the picture in the box, but does not actually resize it. The Fit Picture to Box option (C+Shift+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+F on Windows) rescales the picture so it fits in the box, but does not resize the picture proportionally. This option may distort the picture. The Fit Picture to Box (Proportionally) option (C+Option+Shift+F on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+Shift+F on Windows) rescales the picture proportionally so it fits in the box. The Fit Box to Picture option resizes the box to the size of the picture; the picture is not resized at all. • The Measurements palette: Enter values in the X% and Y% fields to resize the picture, and press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows). Enter values in the X% and Y% fields in the Measurements palette to scale a picture. å Press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while manually resizing a picture box to resize the picture and the box simultaneously. Press C+Option+Shift (Mac OS) or Ctrl+Alt+Shift (Windows) to resize the picture and the picture box proportionally. After importing a picture into a box, you can choose Fit Box to Picture and Fit Picture to Box from the context menu. For information about context menus, see Chapter 2, “Context Menus,” in A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview. ç KEYBOARD COMMANDS MAC OS ∫ WINDOWS AUTO PICTURE RESIZE COMMAND COMMAND Fit to picture box C+Shift+F Ctrl+Shift+F Fit to picture box proportionally C+Option+ Shift+F Ctrl+Alt+Shift+F Decrease size by 5% C+Option+ Shift+< Ctrl+Alt+Shift+< Increase size by 5% C+Option+ Shift+> Ctrl+Alt+Shift+> If you have rotated or skewed a picture before using the keyboard commands, the pictures may not seem to resize correctly. Chapter 11: Pictures 281 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 282 Manipulating Pictures CROPPING PICTURES If you only want a portion of your image to appear, you can manually crop it by adjusting the size of the picture box. To resize a picture box, see “Resizing Boxes” in Chapter 4, “Box Basics.” Manually crop pictures by resizing the picture box to show only the desired portion of a picture. å When a picture is cropped using QuarkXPress, the whole picture (including the cropped part) is sent to the output device. This may slow down your output, even though only the cropped part is printed. Therefore, for increased speed at output, use an image editing application to crop pictures. R O TAT I N G A N D S K E W I N G P I C T U R E S Rotating a picture sets it at a different angle within the box, while skewing a picture applies a slanted look to it. You can rotate or skew a picture using: • The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify (C+M on Mac OS, Ctrl+M on Windows); then click the Picture tab. To rotate a picture, enter a value in the Picture Angle field. To skew a picture, enter a value in the Picture Skew field. Click OK. Use the Picture Angle and Picture Skew fields (Item & Modify & Picture tab) to specify a picture’s rotation and skew within a picture box. Chapter 11: Pictures 282 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 283 Manipulating Pictures • The Measurements palette: Enter values in the r or S fields to rotate or skew a picture, and press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows). Use the r and S fields in the Measurements palette to rotate or skew a picture. å Select the Rotation tool R from the Tools palette to manually rotate both the picture box and the image. When you rotate a picture box in QuarkXPress, the image rotates too. To straighten the picture, rotate the picture back by the same degree amount. For example, if you rotate a picture box by 30°, enter a value of –30° in either the r field in the Measurements palette or in the Picture Angle field in the Picture tab (Item & Modify). COLORING AND SHADING PICTURES You can apply color and shade values to the shadows and middle tones of black-and-white and grayscale pictures. You can apply color and shade to pictures using: • The Style menu: Choose Style & Color and choose a color from the submenu. Choose Style & Shade and choose a percentage from the submenu, or choose Other and enter a value in the Shade field. Click OK. • The Item menu: Choose Item & Modify; then click the Picture tab. Choose a color from the Color pop-up menu. Choose a shade from the Shade pop-up menu, and click OK. • The Colors palette: Choose View & Show Colors (F12). Click the picture icon p, then click one of the colors in the list. Click the arrow < next to the current shade value to display a list of percentage values; choose a percentage from the list. You can also select the shade value in the field, enter a new value, and press Return (Mac OS) or Enter (Windows). Chapter 11: Pictures 283 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 284 Manipulating Pictures When the picture box icon p is selected in the Colors palette, you can drag and drop colors from the palette by clicking one of the color swatches in the color list and dragging the color swatch over a picture box. As soon as the color swatch is positioned over a box, the picture will fill with the new color. Drop the swatch to apply the color. This grayscale picture has had color applied to it. FLIPPING PICTURES You can flip the contents of a picture box from left to right, and from top to bottom using: • The Style menu: Choose Style & Flip Horizontal to flip the contents of a picture box from left to right. Choose Style & Flip Vertical to flip the contents of a picture box from top to bottom. You can flip a picture (left) from left to right by choosing Style & Flip Horizontal (center), and from top to bottom by choosing Style & Flip Vertical (right). • The Measurements palette: Click the horizontal flip icon ( to flip a picture from left to right. Click the vertical flip icon ) to flip the picture from top to bottom. Flip pictures by clicking the flip icons in the Measurements palette. Chapter 11: Pictures 284 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 285 Applying Contrast to Pictures A P P LY I N G C O N T R A S T T O P I C T U R E S Contrast manipulation lets you change the way a picture displays on-screen and at output. In particular, contrast describes tone reproduction — the relationship between the highlights, middle tones, and shadows of a picture. You can create your own contrast using the Picture Contrast Specifications dialog box. Select a normal picture (upper left) and choose Style & Contrast. In the Picture Contrast Specifications dialog box, click the High Contrast tool & (upper right), the Posterized Contrast tool * (lower left), or the Negative check box (lower right). In QuarkXPress, a picture’s contrast displays as a line on a graph in the Picture Contrast Specifications dialog box (Style & Contrast). This line is referred to as a curve. The graph represents a picture’s contrast by plotting input (original contrast) versus output (displayed contrast). The curve represents the picture’s modified tone curve. Any change to this curve affects the picture’s tone. To modify a picture’s contrast: 1 Choose Style & Contrast (C+Shift+C on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+O on Windows). The Picture Contrast Specifications dialog box (Style & Contrast) displays a 45° line from 0 to 1 when a grayscale picture is set at its normal contrast. Chapter 11: Pictures 285 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 286 Applying Contrast to Pictures 2 If you have a color picture selected, choose the HSB, RGB, CMY, or CMYK color model from the Model pop-up menu to determine which color components you want to manipulate. Choose HSB, RGB, CMY, or CMYK from the Model pop-up menu when a color picture is selected. Once a model is chosen, you can manipulate its components (Style & Contrast). 3 The color components for the selected model will become available in the Color area. For example, if you choose the CMYK model, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black check boxes display in the Color area. To modify one or more color components, check them in the Color area. 4 Use any of the nine contrast modification tools to modify the selected curve or curves in various ways. If the picture is grayscale, one curve is available for manipulation. If a color picture is selected, you can choose to manipulate from one to four curves at a time. For example, if CMYK is chosen from the Model pop-up menu, you can manipulate any combination of the Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black curves, simply by checking the channels you want to manipulate. H The Hand tool lets you move entire curves on the contrast graph. When you move a curve against one of the graph’s edges and release the mouse button, it flattens out. Constrain a curve’s movements to horizontal or vertical by pressing Shift while dragging the curve. Use the Hand tool H to adjust the selected contrast curve to where you want it (Style & Contrast). Chapter 11: Pictures 286 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 287 Applying Contrast to Pictures d The Pencil tool lets you redraw or make freehand adjustments to curves. Constrain modifications to 0°, 45°, or 90° by pressing Shift while using the Pencil tool. L The Line tool lets you make linear adjustments to curves. Constrain modifications to 0°, 45°, or 90° by pressing Shift while using the Line tool. $ The Posterizer tool places handles at the 10% increment marks on the horizontal axis. Increase or decrease the input-to-output relationship in tonal range increments of 10% by dragging the handles up or down. % The Spike tool places handles at the 10% increments marked on the horizontal axis. Drag the handles up and down to create spikes. ^ The Normal Contrast tool resets curves to the unmodified contrast position (a 45° line). & The High Contrast tool applies a high contrast shape to curves, making the picture look like line art. * The Posterized Contrast tool applies a posterized shape to curves. ( The Inversion tool flips selected curves horizontally. Clicking the Inversion tool produces a negative of curves selected on the graph. The Inversion tool does not necessarily create a true negative of the overall current picture contrast. It simply inverts any changes you have made to curves. 5 Check Negative to create a negative of the picture’s current contrast. If you have made changes to contrast curves using the Picture Contrast Specifications dialog box, these changes are made before Negative is applied. Checking Negative has the same effect as choosing Negative from the Style menu. 6 Click Apply (C+A on Mac OS, Alt+A on Windows) to preview your changes. Then click OK. å Contrast controls are not available for some picture types, such as 1-bit images and EPS files. However, if you can’t adjust a color picture’s contrast, check your Application Preferences (Edit & Preferences & Preferences & Display pane). Color TIFFs should be set to 8-bit when a picture is imported; otherwise the contrast controls will be inaccessible for that picture. To solve this problem, set Color TIFFs to 8-bit and reimport the picture. Contrast modifications affect only the way QuarkXPress displays and prints an imported picture; the original picture file is unaffected. Chapter 11: Pictures 287 25530DO.qxd 11.14.01 1:11 PM Page 288 Applying Custom Halftone Screens to Pictures A P P LY I N G C U S T O M H A L F T O N E S C R E E N S T O P I C T U R E S P A halftone is a reproduction of a continuous tone photograph, traditionally created by photographing the picture through a crossline or contact screen that contains a grid pattern. Gradations of tone are simulated using dots or other shapes of varying sizes. The Picture Halftone Specifications dialog box controls let you specify a screen’s frequency in lines per inch, angle, and pattern. Use the Picture Halftone Specifications dialog box (Style & Halftone) to apply a custom halftone screen. This grayscale picture has a Frequency of 25 lpi, an Angle of 90°, and its Function (dot shape) is set to Ellipse. To reproduce an image, a halftone screen pattern is repeated at a constant angle and frequency. The screen angle defines the angle at which rows of the screen pattern are placed. The line frequency determines how many rows of the selected screen pattern are printed per inch. To apply a custom halftone screen, select an grayscale picture and: 1 Choose Style & Halftone (C+Shift+H on Mac OS, Ctrl+Shift+H on Windows). 2 To specify the number of lines of the selected screen pattern that will be printed per inch, choose an option from the Frequency pop-up menu or enter a value in the Frequency field. Specifying line frequency depends on a number of factors, including the resolution of the printer and the type of paper you plan to use. In general, the higher the resolution of your output device and the glossier the paper stock you use, the finer your halftone screen (more lines per inch) can be. 3 To specify the angle at which lines of the screen pattern are placed, choose an option from the Angle pop-up menu or enter a value in the Angle field. Chapter 11: Pictures 288 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 289 Applying Custom Halftone Screens to Pictures Specify line Frequency, Angle, and Function using the Picture Halftone Specifications dialog box (Style & Halftone). 4 Choose the available dot shape types from the Function pop-up menu: Default, Dot, Line, Ellipse, Square, or Ordered Dither. • The Default option uses the setting specified in the Output tab of the Print dialog box (File & Print). • The Dot option uses a round spot to create the halftone screen. This pattern is used in most output. • The Line option uses straight lines to create the halftone screen. The width of the line varies depending on your Frequency setting. (The Line function is not the same as the line frequency.) • The Ellipse option uses an oval spot to create the halftone screen. • The Square option uses a square spot to create the halftone screen. This function may look best at very low screen frequencies. • The Ordered Dither option is a pattern optimized for printing to a laser printer or when you are producing multiple copies by photocopying rather than by printing. 5 Click OK. ∫ Halftone screens will not display on your monitor. To see the effects of your custom halftone screen, print the picture. Chapter 11: Pictures 289 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 290 Creating and Editing Clipping Paths C R E AT I N G A N D E D I T I N G C L I P P I N G PAT H S Clipping paths tell QuarkXPress which parts of a picture should be displayed, and which parts should be treated as transparent. This is especially useful when you are attempting to isolate the picture’s subject from its surrounding background in the original picture file. QuarkXPress can create clipping paths from scratch, or it can use embedded path and alpha channel information to create clipping paths. C L I P P I N G PAT H B A S I C S The picture at left shows the picture with all of its data. The picture at right shows how a clipping path can be used to crop unwanted data. A clipping path is any closed Bézier shape that defines a region (or regions) that should be treated as visible, and a region (or regions) that should be treated as invisible. Clipping paths tell QuarkXPress which parts of a picture should be considered visible, and runaround paths tell QuarkXPress where to wrap text. You are not limited to using the same settings for your runaround and clipping paths. You can even use different clipping paths or alpha channels for your clipping and runaround settings. To change runaround, see “Running Text Around Items” in Chapter 10, “Graphics in Typography.” Clipping paths created by QuarkXPress are based on the high-resolution picture file, and are stored with your QuarkXPress document. Chapter 11: Pictures 290 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 291 Creating and Editing Clipping Paths C R E AT I N G C L I P P I N G PAT H S To create or assign a clipping path: 1 Choose Item & Clipping (C+Option+T on Mac OS, Ctrl+Alt+T on Windows). The green path in the Preview area (Item & Clipping) corresponds to the clipping path, and the blue outline corresponds to the picture box. (To change these default colors, choose Edit & Preferences & Preferences; then click the Display pane. Double-click either the Ruler color or the Margin color to change the clipping path or picture box outline colors, respectively.) Choose an option from the Type pop-up menu: • Choose Item to crop an image to the picture box. Choosing Item does not create a clipping path, it simply crops the picture to its picture box. • Choose Picture Bounds to clip a picture around the rectangular “canvas area” of the imported picture file. This includes any white background areas saved with the original picture file. Enter values in the Top, Left, Bottom, and Right fields to determine the outset of the clipping path from the picture’s boundaries. Positive values increase the outset, negative values decrease the outset. Choose Picture Bounds from the Type pop-up menu (Item & Clipping) to use the picture’s canvas area for a clipping path. Chapter 11: Pictures 291 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 292 Creating and Editing Clipping Paths • Choose Embedded Path to clip a picture around a path already embedded in the picture file. Choose a path from the Path pop-up menu if the picture file contains more than one embedded path. Choose Embedded Path from the Type pop-up menu (Item & Clipping), then choose a particular path from the Path pop-up menu. QuarkXPress will read the embedded path information and generate a clipping path. • Choose Alpha Channel to clip a picture around an alpha channel already embedded in a picture file. Choose an alpha channel from the Alpha pop-up menu if the picture file contains more than one embedded alpha channel. Alpha channels are saved in image editing applications. They are selections (not paths) that are created as 8-bit masks. (A mask is a black-and-white or grayscale image used to indicate which parts of another image are visible and which parts are transparent.) Image editing applications are capable of embedding paths and alpha channels in an image. If a picture storing this information is imported into QuarkXPress, you can access the path and channel information using the Clipping tab in the Modify dialog box (Item menu). QuarkXPress can use embedded alpha channel information to define a clipping path, but does not support the partial transparency that an 8-bit mask can contain. Chapter 11: Pictures 292 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 293 Creating and Editing Clipping Paths TIFFs can have embedded paths and alpha channels. EPS, BMP, JPEG, PCX, and PICT files can only have embedded paths. • Choose Non-White Areas to create a QuarkXPress clipping path based on the picture’s subject. Depending on the image and the value in the Threshold field, the clipping path will outline a nonwhite figure within a larger white or nearwhite image (or vice versa). Choose Non-White Areas from the Type pop-up menu (Item & Clipping), to create a clipping path that outlines the picture’s subject and ignores the background (right). Non-White Areas works best when the unwanted parts of the image are much lighter than the subject itself (or vice versa). If you are using a grayscale or color image that has a similar tonal value throughout the picture, QuarkXPress will have a difficult time reading the subject’s outline, and won’t be able to create a very accurate clipping path. å To update any changes in the Preview area in the Clipping tab, click Apply, select a new field, or press Tab. Repeatedly pressing Tab will also move you through the fields. Click Rescan to rebuild the clipping path from scratch based on the Clipping dialog box settings. Clicking Rescan undoes Crop to Box. The Information area in the Clipping tab contains statistics on the number of Alpha Channels and Embedded Paths included in the original picture file, as well as the number of Points that make up the QuarkXPress clipping path. Chapter 11: Pictures 293 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 294 Creating and Editing Clipping Paths M A N I P U L AT I N G C L I P P I N G PAT H S When Embedded Path, Alpha Channel, or Non-White Areas is chosen in the Type pop-up menu, various fields become available that let you manipulate the clipping path. 1 To change the size of the clipping path, enter values in the Outset field. Positive values move the clipping path further from the original setting, negative values decrease the amount of image included in the clipping path. Enter values in the Outset field (Item & Clipping) to describe the distance that the clipping path is outset from the clipped image. At 0 pt (left), the clipping path is not inset or outset. At 10 pt (right), the clipping path is outset by 10 points. å To reduce or eliminate stray pixels that appear at the edge of an image, try using a small negative value in the Outset field, such as -.5 pt. 2 To identify and delete paths around stray pixels when creating the clipping path, enter values in the Noise field. For example, if you set the Noise value to 5 points, any paths in the picture that are less than 5 points will be removed. This is useful for removing unwanted pixels (specifically by deleting small paths around the pixels) in the background of an image. The image at left shows some small extraneous path areas. Those small path areas can be ignored by entering a higher value in the Noise field (Item & Clipping) (right). A clipping path does not necessarily enclose just one item. For example, if you have a picture of two bagels and a scattering of crumbs (and your Clipping tab settings are set to render this scenario), a QuarkXPress clipping path could show two green paths around the two bagels, two green paths around the bagel holes, and a plethora of tiny green paths around the crumbs. All of these paths are considered to be one clipping path. To delete the tiny crumb paths, enter a value in the Noise field that corresponds to their diameters (such as 5 points), and any path in the picture that is less than 5 points in diameter will be removed. Chapter 11: Pictures 294 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 295 Creating and Editing Clipping Paths 3 To specify clipping path accuracy, enter values in the Smoothness field. When you enter a low value, such as 0, in the Smoothness field, a very accurate but quite complex path will be generated. Because of its complexity and the number of points involved, it may use a lot of memory and cause problems during output. A higher value creates a less accurate path. Use the Smoothness value (Item & Clipping) to determine how smooth or rough a path is. At 0 pt (left), many points describe the path; at 2 pt (center), fewer points are used, but the shape is still described relatively accurately; at 20 pt (right), the path loses its cohesiveness altogether. ∫ The Points field in the Information area records the number of points that make up the QuarkXPress clipping path. 4 To specify how QuarkXPress distinguishes dark pixels from light pixels, enter values in the Threshold field. When Non-White Areas is chosen, any pixel shaded below the Threshold value is excluded from the clipping area, and any pixel above it is included. The reverse is true for alpha channels. The Threshold value determines how white is defined. All pixels defined as “white” are excluded from the path. For example, if the Threshold value is 20%, and a pixel’s gray value is below or at 20%, the pixel will be considered “white” and excluded from the clipping path. Enter values in the Threshold field (Item & Clipping) to define where to place the clipping path. At 0 (left), nothing is defined as white, so everything is included in the clipping path. At 10% (center), everything lighter than 10% gray is defined as white, and is ignored (the rest is included in the clipping path). At 75% (right), everything lighter than 75% gray is defined as white, which means that only the very dark areas are included in the clipping path. Chapter 11: Pictures 295 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 296 Creating and Editing Clipping Paths ∫ The Threshold field is only available for the Non-White Areas and Alpha Channel options. (You can alter the Threshold value when an alpha channel is selected because alpha channels are grayscale. Grayscale alpha channels consist of pixels that vary in gray value, so a threshold can be used to determine which pixels fall inside the clipping path and which ones fall outside the clipping path.) C R E AT I N G S P E C I A L E F F E C T S Various options in the Clipping tab let you invert a clipping path or specify whether a picture is clipped using outside edges only, or whether the picture is contained within its box. To create special effects, select a picture and: 1 To make visible regions transparent and transparent regions visible, check Invert. Use the Invert option to display previously transparent areas and exclude previously visible areas. 2 To determine whether or not QuarkXPress allows holes within a path, check Outside Edges Only to select only the outer edges of the clipping path. Uncheck Outside Edges Only to include paths that define holes. Check Outside Edges Only (Item& Clipping) to generate outer path edges only, like the outline of the butterfly (left). Uncheck Outside Edges Only to generate all of the inner path information, like the butterfly’s wing pattern (right). Chapter 11: Pictures 296 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 297 Creating and Editing Clipping Paths 3 Check Restrict to Picture Box to crop the picture to the edges of the picture box. Uncheck Restrict to Picture Box to allow the image to extend beyond the picture box boundaries. The Restrict to Picture Box option (Item& Clipping) contains an image within the picture box (left). Uncheck Restrict to Picture Box to display an image outside of the picture box (right). 4 To remove portions of the clipping path that fall outside the box borders, click Crop to Box. Position an unwanted portion of an image outside the picture box (left), then click Crop to Box to display only the desired portion (right). When you move the image, the cropped part is not visible. 5 Click Apply (C+A on Mac OS, Alt+A on Windows) to preview your changes; then click OK. å When you color a picture box, the clipping path is positioned in front of the colored box. You can create interesting effects by checking Invert in the Clipping tab — the clipped image will be filled with the background color. Chapter 11: Pictures 297 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 298 Creating and Editing Clipping Paths E D I T I N G C L I P P I N G PAT H S You can manually adjust a QuarkXPress clipping path. If you do so, you are using the low-resolution preview as your guide, so accuracy is not as great. You cannot manually adjust an embedded clipping path (one not created by QuarkXPress). Select the picture and choose Item & Edit. Then check Clipping Path to access and manipulate the clipping path’s points, curve handles, and line segments. The clipping path displays as a green outline. Edit the path the same way you would any Bézier object. For information about editing Bézier boxes, see “Reshaping Boxes” in Chapter 4, “Box Basics.” Choose Item & Edit and check Clipping Path to access the clipping path’s Bézier outline. å When Item is chosen in the Type pop-up menu (Item & Clipping), you cannot edit a clipping path using Bézier points. Chapter 11: Pictures 298 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 299 Listing and Updating Pictures L I S T I N G A N D U P D AT I N G P I C T U R E S The Usage feature (Utilities menu) lets you keep track of all your imported pictures. The Usage dialog box lists the pictures in a document, shows their status, and lets you update picture that have been modified, moved, or renamed. V E R I F Y I N G S TAT U S A N D U P D AT I N G P I C T U R E S QuarkXPress does not include high-resolution information with the pictures (except for PICT images) you import using File & Get Picture command. Instead, the application maintains a path to picture files and retrieves the high-resolution information it needs when printing. To check picture status and update pictures in your document: 1 Choose Utilities & Usage; then click the Pictures tab. A list displays the imported pictures in the document, as well as their status. • If a picture is checked in the Print column, it will print. • The Name column displays the file name, and indicates a brief path to the picture file. Windows only: Picture boxes with embedded and linked objects are named “embedded object” and “linked object” with no path displayed. • The Page column indicates the page on which the picture appears in the active document. If the picture is located on the pasteboard, a dagger † (Mac OS) or the characters “PB” (Windows) display next to the number indicating the page near the picture. • The Type column indicates the type of file format. • The Status column indicates the state of the picture. A status of OK indicates that QuarkXPress knows the location of the picture file and that it has not been modified. A status of Modified indicates that the picture file’s Last Modified date and time is different from when you imported it. Usually this is because the picture has been changed (for example, you changed the color mode). A status of Missing indicates that QuarkXPress cannot find the picture file or that its file name is different. Use the Usage dialog box (Utilities menu) to keep track of the pictures in an active document, and to find or update any missing picture files. Chapter 11: Pictures 299 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 300 Listing and Updating Pictures 2 Check More Information to display the full path to the picture file, as well as the file’s size. ∫ If a picture was imported using XTensions software that is later disabled, the words “No XTension” display in the Status column of the Usage dialog box (Utilities & Usage & Pictures tab). The More Information area displays the message: “The XTensions module that imported this picture is not available; a low resolution version of the picture will be printed.” To resolve this problem, use the QuarkXPress XTensions Manager (Utilities menu) to enable the appropriate XTensions software or filter. If the XTensions software is distributed with QuarkXPress and was deleted or never installed, drag-copy the files from the CD-ROM to your “XTension” folder and relaunch QuarkXPress. 3 To locate a missing picture file, select it and click Update; the Find dialog box lets you preview picture files so you can locate and choose the appropriate file. If QuarkXPress finds other missing files in the same folder, an alert dialog box lets you update all of them simultaneously. Click Open to recreate the path from the document to the picture. Click Update (Utilities & Usage) to access the Find dialog box. You can locate a missing picture and recreate its path. Chapter 11: Pictures 300 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 301 Listing and Updating Pictures 4 To update a modified picture file, click Update; every instance of the modified picture used in the document will be updated. When you use the Update option in the Usage dialog box (Utilities & Usage), the picture’s offset, rotation, and other modifications are remembered. If you reimport using the Get Picture dialog box, any modifications are lost. Windows only: To update a linked object, use the Links command in the Edit menu. The Usage dialog box should only be used to manipulate pictures that were brought into the document using the Get Picture command or dragged from the Windows desktop or Windows Explorer. For information about updating links, see Chapter 4, “Edit Menu,” in A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview. 5 Click Show Me to locate and view a picture in your document. 6 Check Print if you want to print a picture; uncheck Print if you want to suppress printing. If QuarkXPress cannot find your pictures when you are ready to print, you will be asked to update their status. To prevent a picture box from printing, select the box; choose Item & Modify & Box tab; then check Suppress Printout. To prevent only the picture in the box from printing, check Suppress Picture Printout in the Picture tab. 7 Click Done (Mac OS) or Close (Windows) to close the dialog box. ∫ If you modify a picture file (using another application) after you import it, you should update the image using the Usage dialog box. If you choose not to update a modified picture, QuarkXPress prints the picture using the modified file, even though it displays the original preview in the document. å If you move or change the name of a picture file after the picture has been imported using the Get Picture command in the File menu, QuarkXPress loses the path from the document to the picture file. You can use the Usage dialog box to recreate the path. You can use Auto Picture Import to check high-resolution pictures when you open a document (although this feature can greatly slow down the time it takes to open a document). The application checks for changes in a high-resolution data file’s name, modification date, and location. The Auto Picture Import area (Edit & Preferences & Preferences & General pane) offers three options: Off, On, and Verify. Choosing Off disables automatic picture importing. Choosing On automatically reimports modified pictures when you open the document. Choosing Verify lets you control which pictures are updated. Chapter 11: Pictures 301 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 302 Configuring Picture Export Options CONFIGURING PICTURE EXPORT OPTIONS W Print documents generally use picture files in formats such as TIFF, BMP, and EPS. However, HTML pages generally use picture files in formats such as JPEG, GIF, and PNG. Fortunately, QuarkXPress can automatically change the file format of your graphics when you export a Web document as HTML. So regardless of what format a picture was in when you imported it, you can rest assured that it’s in the right format when you export the Web document as an HTML page. C O N F I G U R I N G E X P O RT O P T I O N S F O R P I C T U R E S A N D G R A P H I C TEXT BOXES W The format you use for exported pictures and raster text boxes depends on the pictures you’re exporting. (A raster text box is a text box that you have chosen to convert to a graphic.) Bitmap pictures (such as scanned photos) generally look best when exported in JPEG format. Object-oriented pictures (such as raster text boxes and EPS files created in Adobe Illustrator) often look best when exported in GIF format. To specify a default export format for the selected picture: 1 Choose Item & Modify. The Modify dialog box displays. 2 Click Export to display the Export tab. 3 If the active object is a text box, click Convert to Graphic on Export to export it as a graphic. The Convert to Graphic on Export option is not available if you have selected a picture box. Use the options in the Export tab of the Modify dialog box (Item menu) to specify the export format of the selected picture. Chapter 11: Pictures 302 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 303 Configuring Picture Export Options 4 From the Export As pop-up menu, choose GIF, JPEG, or PNG to export the selected object in that format. ∫ The PNG filter must be loaded for QuarkXPress to export pictures in PNG format from a Web document. 5 Enter alternate text (if desired) in the Alternate Text field. Text in the Alternate Text field will display as a pop-up window when the arrow pointer is moved over the graphic. If the graphics cannot be downloaded, the alternate text displays in its place. By default, the file name will display in the Alternate Text field. 6 If you have chosen JPEG, choose a quality level from the Image Quality pop-up menu. You can choose Highest, High, Medium, Low, or Lowest. Lower-quality images are more compressed; they will load faster but will not look as good. Higher-quality images are less compressed and will take longer to download, but will look better. Check Progressive if you want the object to display quickly at a low resolution, followed by the gradual download of the full-resolution image. 7 If you have chosen GIF format, choose a color palette from the Color Palette pop-up menu: • Choosing Web-safe will create a graphic that displays colors identically on both Mac OS and Windows Web browsers. • Choosing Adaptive will create a graphic with high color fidelity, but that graphic will display properly only if the monitor it is viewed on supports 16-bit color or higher. • Choosing Windows will create a graphic optimized for the Windows color palette. Use this option if only Windows users will be viewing the graphic. • Choosing Mac OS will create a graphic optimized for the Mac OS color palette. Use this option if only Mac OS users will be viewing the graphic. Check Interlacing if you want the GIF to display quickly at a low resolution, followed by the gradual download of the full-resolution image. Check Use Dithering if you want to smooth the edges between different colors (for a less pixelated appearance). 8 If you have chosen PNG, choose True color if you want the exported PNG to use 24-bit color. (For an explanation of bits and bit depth, see “Understanding Picture File Formats” earlier in this chapter.) If you do not want to use 24-bit color, choose Indexed color. An indexed color picture assigns the pixels in the picture an index number, which corresponds to a value in a look-up table that is part of the picture file. Applications reading indexed color images read the look-up table to see what defines a particular Chapter 11: Pictures 303 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 304 Configuring Picture Export Options color, and use those values to display the color. Indexed images tend to be smaller because only the relevant color information needs to be stored and read. After checking Indexed color, choose a color palette from the Palette pop-up menu: • Choosing Web-safe will create a graphic that displays colors identically on both Mac OS and Windows Web browsers. • Choosing Adaptive will create a graphic with high color fidelity, but that graphic will display properly only if the monitor it is viewed on supports 16-bit color or higher. • Choosing Windows will create a graphic optimized for the Windows color palette. Use this option if only Windows users will be viewing the graphic. • Choosing Mac OS will create a graphic optimized for the Mac OS color palette. Use this option if only Mac OS users will be viewing the graphic. Then, check Use Interlacing if you want the PNG to display quickly at low resolution, followed by a gradual download of the full-resolution image. Check Use Dithering if you want to smooth the edges between different colors (for a less pixelated appearance). 9 Click OK. When the Web document is exported, the settings will be applied to the selected object. Chapter 11: Pictures 304 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 305 Understanding Spot and Process Colors Chapter 12: Color While the eye perceives color, the brain classifies it, identifying it in such terms as warm, cold, vivid, dull, tranquil, or exciting. For instance, most people perceive red as a warm color, suggesting energy and movement, and blue as a cool color, suggesting calm and stillness. Understanding these typical perceptions will help you use color to reinforce your message, draw the eye, or make a statement. QuarkXPress lets you create custom colors, choose colors from several standardized color matching systems, and edit colors. You can also apply color and shade to text, items, and boxes. No matter how you choose to use color, your documents will be enhanced and enlivened. U N D E R S TA N D I N G S P O T A N D P R O C E S S C O L O R S P The final output method for your document often dictates whether you should use spot or process colors. While some print devices can output QuarkXPress documents in full color, final production for many publishing environments takes the form of color separation plates reproduced on-press using color inks. Q U A R K X P R E S S S E PA R AT I O N P L AT E S P You can specify two types of color in a QuarkXPress document: spot color and process color. When you print a document page that contains spot colors, QuarkXPress outputs all characters, pictures, and items of a given spot color on the same spot color separation plate. When a document contains items to which you have applied a process color, QuarkXPress separates the color into the appropriate number of process ink components, and prints a process separation plate of each ink component for every page in your document. If, for example, your document pages contain items to which a single spot color has been applied as well as items to which you have applied four-color process colors, QuarkXPress will print five separation plates for each page that contains the colors: the cyan, magenta, yellow, and black process separation plates, plus another plate that contains page elements to which the spot color is applied. Chapter 12: Color 305 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 306 Understanding Spot and Process Colors P R E S S P L AT E S P To reproduce color on-press, commercial printers create a press plate from each of the QuarkXPress spot color and process ink separations. Color ink is used to transfer the image from the press plate to the paper. For example, cyan ink is used to print the page image contained on the cyan press plate; magenta ink is used to print the page image contained on the magenta plate, and so on. A four-color job requires four press plates, each printing a different ink color to create the final full-color page. S P E C I F Y I N G M AT C H I N G S Y S T E M C O L O R S Selecting colors from a color matching system can be helpful when communicating with a commercial printer about the colors in your document. QuarkXPress lets you select colors from the following color models: PANTONE Hexachrome®, the PANTONE MATCHING SYSTEM®, the TRUMATCH ™ color system, the FOCOLTONE ™ color system, DIC ™ , and TOYO ™ . The Edit Color dialog box (Edit & Colors & New) lets you display and select colors from any of these color matching systems. Colors from the color matching systems are primarily used in documents that are designed for printed output. T R U M AT C H A N D F O C O LT O N E The TRUMATCH and FOCOLTONE color systems were designed to achieve predictable four-color results when they are output using the standard set of SWOP (Specifications for Web-Offset Publications) process inks. Because the colors are predefined, you can be assured that the final printed color will closely match the color as printed in the corresponding color swatchbook (subject to variations in paper color, ink purity, and other variables). Swatchbooks for these matching systems are available in coated and uncoated paper editions. PA N T O N E The PANTONE MATCHING SYSTEM was designed to specify spot colors. The PANTONE MATCHING SYSTEM prints each color on its own plate when you print separations. Because inks in PANTONE colors are standardized, cataloged, and premixed, you are assured of accurate color for your final output. If you want to specify PANTONE colors for process-color separation, the PANTONE ProSim color model allows you to simulate many PANTONE spot colors using four-color process separations (CMYK) and view the PANTONE process simulation on your color monitor. Use the PANTONE Color Formula Guide for accurate PANTONEidentified solid color standards for coated and uncoated paper stock. Chapter 12: Color 306 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:46 AM Page 307 Specifying Matching System Colors The PANTONE Process Color System® is designed to reproduce colors using four standard PANTONE process inks. This matching system allows you to choose from more than 3,000 color combinations, which are arranged chromatically. Use the PANTONE Process Color Guide for accurate PANTONE-identified color standards for coated paper stock. The PANTONE Hexachrome color system is designed to reproduce colors using six unique PANTONE process inks. This matching system allows you to choose from more than 2,000 ultra high-fidelity colors, which are arranged chromatically. Use the PANTONE Hexachrome Color Selector for accurate PANTONE Hexachrome-identified color standards for coated and uncoated paper stock. DIC AND TOYO DIC and TOYO are spot color matching systems used primarily in Japan. S P E C I F Y I N G A M AT C H I N G S Y S T E M C O L O R After choosing a color matching system, you can change a spot color to a process color by unchecking Spot Color in the Edit Color dialog box (Edit & Colors & New), or display the context menu for that color in the Colors palette, and choose Make Process. To change a process color to a spot color, check Spot Color in the Edit Color dialog box (Edit & Colors & New), or display the context menu for that color in the Colors palette, and choose Make Spot. å QuarkXPress lets you choose from many different standardized color matching systems to create your colors. If there are some matching systems you never use, remove those unneeded files from the “Color” folder within your QuarkXPress application folder. Keep the unused matching systems in another folder. For information about using the Colors palette context menu, see Chapter 2, “Context Menus,” in A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview. Chapter 12: Color 307 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 308 Understanding Web-Safe Colors U N D E R S TA N D I N G W E B - S A F E C O L O R S W There are 216 colors that are considered “safe” to use in a Web page, meaning that they are the colors most likely to display the same on Mac OS and Windows, and in different Web browsers. These colors are supported by the 256-color system palettes of both Mac OS and Windows. You can use whatever colors you want in a Web document, but if you want to be sure that your end users see the same colors in your Web page that you do, you might want to consider using Web-safe colors only. The term “Web-safe color” refers to a palette of 216 colors that are common to most operating systems and browser applications. These colors display consistently to people viewing a Web page, regardless of what monitor color depth and browser application they are using. As you design a Web document, consider the people who will view your Web page. If you aren’t sure what monitor color depths or browser applications your audience will be using, or if you think your audience may be using monitors that can only display 256 colors, you might consider Web-safe colors for text, background colors, other large areas of solid color, and for certain pictures. Creating a page with Web-safe colors lets you see what your audience will potentially see, so you can design the page accordingly. C R E AT I N G W E B - S A F E C O L O R S W You can create Web-safe colors in QuarkXPress by choosing options from the Web Safe and Web Named Colors models in the Edit Color dialog box (Edit & Colors). For more information about the Edit Color dialog box, see the “Creating and Editing Colors” section of this chapter. å If you’re concerned about your Web page colors displaying correctly on your readers’ computers, you can check your chosen colors by reducing your monitor display to 256 colors in the Monitors control panel (Mac OS) or the Display Properties control panel (Windows). Also, be sure to check the Web page preview in the Web browsers your readers are most likely to use. For more information about Web page preview, see Chapter 24, “Previewing and Exporting Web Pages.” Chapter 12: Color 308 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 309 Creating and Editing Colors C R E AT I N G A N D E D I T I N G C O L O R S QuarkXPress automatically adds default colors, such as RGB and CMYK, to the Colors palette. However, many designs use other colors. To use other colors, you'll need to create new colors or edit existing colors. You create and edit colors using the Colors dialog box, which allows you to create colors using color wheels, numeric fields, or color matching systems. T H E C O L O R S PA L E T T E When you open a new print document, its Colors palette (View & Show Colors) contains all the colors in the application’s Colors dialog box (Edit & Colors). When you open a new Web document, its Colors palette contains all the colors in the application’s Colors dialog box, and 16 named Web-safe colors. QuarkXPress indicates whether a color is a spot color or process color by displaying either a spot color icon or a process color icon to the right of each color name. For more information about the Colors palette, see Chapter 1, “Palettes,” in A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview. The Colors palette (View & Show Colors) lets you apply color to any item. THE COLORS PALETTE CONTEXT MENU The Colors palette context menu displays when you invoke the context menu by pressing the appropriate key shortcut and clicking a color name (Mac OS), or right-clicking a color name (Windows), in the Colors palette. Using the context menu for the Colors palette, you can create a new color; edit, duplicate, or delete the selected color; or change the selected color from spot to process, or vice-versa. For information about context menus, see Chapter 2, “Context Menus,” in A Guide to QuarkXPress: Interface Overview. Chapter 12: Color 309 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 310 Creating and Editing Colors The Colors palette context menu lets you quickly create, edit, duplicate, and delete colors. WORKING WITH COLORS The colors you have created for a particular document and many default application colors can be edited easily in QuarkXPress. You can use the Colors dialog box (Edit & Colors) to create, edit, duplicate, or delete a color; to append colors from another QuarkXPress document; or to globally change all document items of one color to another color. You can also use the Colors dialog box to specify trapping relationships between different colors for documents that will be output to separation plates. å To open the Colors dialog box (Edit & Colors) from the Colors palette, press C (Mac OS) or Ctrl (Windows) while you click a color name. The Colors dialog box (Edit & Colors) lets you create, edit, duplicate, delete, append, and specify trapping for colors in an open document. Chapter 12: Color 310 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 311 Creating and Editing Colors To specify which colors display in the Colors dialog box, choose an option from the Show pop-up menu. • Choose All Colors to display all the colors available to the document. When no document is open, only the default colors for all documents display. • Choose Spot Colors to display only spot colors, which appear on their own, separate separation plate. • Choose Process Colors to display only process colors, including High Fidelity (HiFi) color. • Choose Multi-Ink to display only those colors that you have built from other process and spot inks using the Multi-Ink option in the Model pop-up menu of the Edit Color dialog box. • Choose Colors In Use to display only those colors that are applied somewhere in the active document. • Choose Colors Not Used to display only those colors that are unused in the active document. The Colors dialog box contains two lists: the top displays a list of colors according to the choice you make in the Show pop-up menu, and the bottom displays the ink composition of the selected color. When no documents are open, the list displays all default colors. When a document is active, the list only displays colors for the active document. The Colors dialog box includes the following colors by default: • Red, Green, and Blue: You can edit these colors or delete them from the default color list. • Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black, and White: You cannot edit or delete these colors. • Registration: You can edit the color Registration, but you cannot delete it. ∫ You should apply the color Registration to lines when creating your own registration or crop marks. Text, pictures, or items to which Registration has been applied will print on all separation plates. P CREATING A NEW COLOR QuarkXPress lets you choose from several color models and from a number of color matching systems when you create new colors for a selected document. If you have colors you use frequently, you can create new colors for the default color list in your QuarkXPress application when no documents are open. You can create up to 1,000 default or document-specific colors. To create a new color: 1 Choose Edit & Colors to display the Colors dialog box, and then click New to display the Edit Color dialog box. If a document is open, you can also display Chapter 12: Color 311 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 312 Creating and Editing Colors the context menu for the Colors palette and choose New. When you choose the New command, QuarkXPress automatically opens the Edit Color dialog box for you. Colors created when no documents are open are default colors that are included with all subsequently created documents; colors created when a document is open are specific to that document only. The Edit Color dialog box (Edit & Colors & New) contains controls that let you create spot or process separation colors. 2 To name your new color, enter a name in the Name field. 3 To specify the color model for your new color, choose an option from the Model pop-up menu. For creating and editing colors in your documents, QuarkXPress lets you choose the color model that is right for you: RGB (red-green-blue), HSB (hue-saturation-brightness), LAB, CMYK (cyan-magenta-yellow-black), Multi-Ink, Web Safe, Web Named Colors, and PANTONE Hexachrome (cyanmagenta-yellow-black-orange-green) . You can also choose from one of the following standard color matching systems: the PANTONE MATCHING SYSTEM, the TRUMATCH color system, the FOCOLTONE color system, DIC, and TOYO. Chapter 12: Color 312 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 313 Creating and Editing Colors The Model pop-up menu lets you choose from several color models and from a number of color matching systems to create and edit colors. If you choose RGB, HSB, LAB, or CMYK you can use the color wheel to pick a color, or you can enter values in the numeric color component fields to specify a color. • To create a custom color using percentages of red, green, and blue, choose RGB from the Model pop-up menu. Create the color by entering percentage values in the R , G, and B fields, by using the sliders, or by clicking and dragging to select a color from the color wheel. Release the mouse button when the color you want displays in the New area. RGB, an additive color system, is most often used with slide recorders or color video monitors, and also works well for Web pages. Red, green, and blue light is mixed to represent colors on a video screen. • To create a color using hue, saturation, and brightness (HSB), choose HSB from the Model pop-up menu. Enter a degree value in the H field, and percentage values in the S and B fields, use the sliders, or click and drag to select a color from the color wheel. Release the mouse button when the color you want displays in the New area. HSB is a color model used by artists, because it resembles the manner in which they mix colors. Hue describes color pigment; saturation measures the amount of color pigment; and brightness measures the amount of black in a color. Chapter 12: Color 313 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 314 Creating and Editing Colors • To create a color using LAB, choose LAB from the Model pop-up menu. The LAB color model, also referred to as LAB color space, is a standard threedimensional model for representing colors. Colors are specified by a luminance coordinate (L) and two chrominance coordinates (A for green-red), and (B for blue-yellow). In the LAB color space, equal distances represent color differences of roughly equal visual magnitudes. Enter a percentage value in the L field, and numerical values ranging from –120 to 120 in the A and B fields, use the sliders, or click and drag to select a color from the color wheel. Release the mouse button when the color you want displays in the New area. LAB, or CIELAB, is a color space designed to be independent of differing interpretations imposed by monitor or printer manufacturers. The LAB model used in QuarkXPress uses the “D50 illuminant” to be consistent with most usage. • To create a color based on tint percentages of existing process or spot inks, choose Multi-Ink from the Model pop-up menu. Choose whether you are using CMYK or Hexachrome process inks in the Process Inks pop-up menu, and then use the Ink list and Shade pop-up menu in the color selection window to adjust ink percentages until the color you want displays in the New area. ∫ Before using the Multi-Ink color model, consult with your commercial printer to ensure that the colors you plan to create can be reproduced on-press. • To create a CMYK color, choose CMYK from the Model pop-up menu. Create the color by entering percentage values in the C, M, Y, and K fields, use the sliders, or click and drag to select a color from the color wheel. Release the mouse button when the color you want is displayed in the New area. CMYK is a subtractive color model used by professional printers to reproduce colors by combining cyan, magenta, yellow, and black inks on a press. • To select a Web-safe color using its hexadecimal value, choose Web Safe from the Model pop-up menu. For example, you might select “#003399” for a dark blue color using the Web Safe model. Web-safe colors are used for color consistency in Web documents. For information about Web-safe colors, see “Understanding Web-Safe Colors” in this chapter. W • To select a Web-safe color using its assigned color name — for example, “DarkBlue” — choose Web Named Colors from the Model pop-up menu. Chapter 12: Color 314 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 315 Creating and Editing Colors Web-safe colors are used for color consistency in Web documents. For more information about Web-safe colors, see “Understanding Web-Safe Colors” in this chapter. W å Web Safe and Web Named Colors are two distinct color models, with different colors included in their libraries. Not all Web-safe colors are included in the Web Named Colors palette. W • To select a color from a color matching system and add it to your color list, choose one of the standardized color matching systems from the Model pop-up menu. When you choose a color matching system model, the appropriate color matching system selector displays in the Edit Color dialog box. Select a color either by entering its number in the name field below the color swatch, or by scrolling to the color and clicking the color swatch in the color selector window. The color name is automatically entered in the Name field for you. The Edit Color dialog box (Edit & Colors & New) also lets you select colors from many standardized color matching systems. 4 To adjust the brightness (the amount of black) of a color when using the HSB, RGB, LAB, or CMYK color models, use the vertical slider to the right of the color wheel. Dragging the slider up increases brightness; dragging it down decreases brightness. Chapter 12: Color 315 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 316 Creating and Editing Colors 5 To specify the color you create as a spot color, regardless of the model you use to create it, check the Spot Color check box. Uncheck this box to specify it as a process color. QuarkXPress prints items to which you apply a spot color as an individual ink separation plate; items to which you apply a process color are printed on each of the process ink separation plates. For specific information about separations, see Chapter 23, “Output.” P 6 To specify the halftoning that will be used when you print a separation plate that contains a screen for a spot color, choose an option from the Halftone pop-up menu. Choose Process Black to specify a screen angle of 45°. Choose Process Yellow to specify a screen angle of 90°. Choose Process Magenta to specify a screen angle of 75°. Choose Process Cyan to specify a screen angle of 105°. When specifying one of the halftone options, all the halftoning components (frequency, angle, and function) are adopted. P 7 Use the New area to see the color as you create it. 8 To add the color you created to the Colors list, click OK to return to the Colors dialog box or the Colors palette. 9 If clicking OK returns you to the Colors dialog box, click Save to add the new color to the Colors list. å QuarkXPress lets you choose from many different standardized color matching systems to create your colors. If there are some matching systems you never use, remove those unneeded files from the “Color” folder within your QuarkXPress application folder. Keep the unused matching systems in another folder. EDITING A COLOR To edit an existing color: 1 Choose Edit & Colors, select the color you want to edit in the Colors list, then click Edit to display the Edit Color dialog box. You can also double-click the color you want to edit in the Colors list to display the Edit Color dialog box. If a document is open, you can display the Colors palette context menu for the color and choose Edit . When you use the context menu to access the Edit command, QuarkXPress automatically opens the Edit Color dialog box for you. Chapter 12: Color 316 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 317 Creating and Editing Colors 2 To change the name of the color, enter a new name in the Name field. 3 To change the color model, choose a different color model from the Model pop-up menu. You may need to scroll through the new model’s colors in the color selection area to find one that most closely resembles the color you want. 4 To print process separation plates for a color, regardless of the color model upon which it is based, uncheck Spot Color. P 5 To change the halftoning of a spot color, choose a new option from the Halftone pop-up menu. Choose Process Black to specify a screen angle of 45°. Choose Process Yellow to specify a screen angle of 90°. Choose Process Magenta to specify a screen angle of 75°. Choose Process Cyan to specify a screen angle of 105°. When specifying one of the halftone options, all the halftoning components (frequency, angle, and function) are adopted. P 6 Use the controls on the right side of the dialog box to adjust the color: • Use the color wheel, scroll bars, and numeric fields to adjust the values for an RGB, HSB, LAB, or CMYK color • Use the Ink list and Shade column to adjust ink percentages for a Multi-Ink color • Click the new color in the color swatch, or enter the new color number in the name field below the color swatch, to choose a new color from a Web-safe color model or a standardized color matching system model. 7 When editing the color, you can compare the edited and original colors as they display in the New and Original areas of the dialog box. These areas display colors picked from the color wheel, colors specified by the numeric fields and scroll bars, and colors chosen from a Web-safe color model color selector or a standardized color matching system color selector. • The New field displays the edited version of the existing color. • The Original area displays the existing color before you began editing it. Refer to the New area for comparison as you make modifications to the existing color. For example, if you are trying to match an RGB color to swatches from a standardized color matching system, compare the existing color in the Original area to the new selection in the New area to get the closest match possible. 8 Click OK to return to the Colors dialog box or the Colors palette. Chapter 12: Color 317 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 318 Creating and Editing Colors 9 If clicking OK returns you to the Colors dialog box, click Save to save the color changes. The Edit Color dialog box (Edit & Colors & Edit) contains controls that let you change the properties of a color. å To compare two existing colors, choose Edit & Colors. Shift+click to select two consecutive colors, or C+click (Mac OS) or Ctrl+click (Windows) to select two nonconsecutive colors. Press Option (Mac OS) or Alt (Windows) to change the Append button to Compare. Click Compare to display a summary of each component; the differences display in bold. DUPLICATING A COLOR To duplicate an existing color: 1 Choose Edit & Colors, select the color you want to duplicate from the Colors list, then click Duplicate to display the Edit Color dialog box for the duplicate color. If a document is open, you can also display the context menu for the color in the Colors palette, and choose Duplicate to display the Edit Color dialog box. When you use the context menu to access the Duplicate command, QuarkXPress automatically opens the Edit Color dialog box. Chapter 12: Color 318 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 319 Creating and Editing Colors 2 QuarkXPress automatically enters a name for the duplicate color in the Name field. To change this name, enter a new name in the Name field. 3 Click OK to return to the Colors dialog box or the Colors palette. 4 If clicking OK returns you to the Colors dialog box, click Save to save the duplicate color. DELETING A COLOR While you cannot delete some of the default colors, you can delete Red, Green, and Blue from the Colors list, along with any new or duplicate colors you have created. To remove a color from the color list: 1 Choose Edit & Colors, select the color you want to remove from the Colors list, and then click Delete. If a document is open, you can also display the context menu for the color in the Colors palette, and choose Delete . 2 If you try to delete a color that is used in the active document, an alert lets you choose a replacement color. Choose a replacement color from the Replace with pop-up menu, and then click OK to return to the Colors dialog box or the Colors palette. 3 If QuarkXPress returns you to the Colors dialog box after clicking Delete, click Save to save the color deletion. IMPORTING COLORS FROM ANOTHER DOCUMENT QuarkXPress lets you append colors from another document using the Colors dialog box (Edit & Colors) or the Append command (File & Append). To append colors using the Colors dialog box: 1 Choose Edit & Colors to display the Colors dialog box, and then click Append to display the Append Colors dialog box. 2 Use the controls in the Append Colors dialog box to locate and select the document with the colors you want to append, and then click Open to display the Append dialog box. 3 In the Available list, select each color you want to append from the source document by double-clicking it. To append all colors from the source document, click Include All. Chapter 12: Color 319 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 320 Creating and Editing Colors Each color you select displays in the Including list (Mac OS) or the Include list (Windows). If you decide you do not want to append some of the colors in the Including list (Mac OS) or the Include list (Windows), simply double-click each unwanted color to remove it from the list, or click Remove All to remove all colors from the list. Use the Append dialog box to indicate which colors you want to append to the target color list. 4 When all colors you want to append display in the Including list (Mac OS) or the Include list (Windows), click OK. 5 If the source document contains a color with the same name as a color in the target color list, but the two colors have different properties, the Append Conflict dialog box displays: • If you want to append the color and give it a new name, click Rename to open the Rename Color dialog box; then enter a name in the New Name field and click OK. QuarkXPress appends the color and assigns it the new name; the existing color in the target color list remains unchanged. • If you want QuarkXPress to append the color and automatically assign a new name to it, click Auto-Rename. QuarkXPress appends the color and places an asterisk at the beginning of the color name; the existing color in the target color list remains unchanged. Chapter 12: Color 320 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 321 Creating and Editing Colors • If you want to replace the existing color in the target color list with the color from the source document, click Use New. • If you want to keep the existing color in the target color list and do not want to append the color from the source document, click Use Existing. QuarkXPress ignores the color in the source document and does not append it to the target color list. Use the Append Conflict dialog box to indicate what QuarkXPress should do when appending a color with the same name, but with different properties, as a color in the target color list. 6 Click Save to save the appended colors and close the Colors dialog box. To append colors using the Append command (File menu): 1 Choose File & Append to display the Append dialog box. 2 Use the controls in the Append dialog box to locate and select the document with the colors you want to append. 3 Click Open to display the Append to dialog box, and then click the Colors tab. 4 In the Available list, select each color you want to append from the source document by double-clicking it. To append all colors from the source document, click Include All. Chapter 12: Color 321 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 322 Creating and Editing Colors Each color you select displays in the Including list (Mac OS) or the Include list (Windows). If you decide you do not want to append some of the colors in the Including list (Mac OS) or the Include list (Windows), simply double-click each unwanted color to remove it from the list, or click Remove All to remove all colors from the list. Use the Colors tab of the Append dialog box to indicate which colors you want to append to the target color list. 5 When all colors you want to append display in the Including list (Mac OS) or the Include list (Windows), click OK. 6 If the source document contains a color with the same name as a color in the target color list, the Append Conflict dialog box displays: • If you want to append the color and give it a new name, click Rename to open the Rename Color dialog box; then enter a name in the New Name field and click OK. QuarkXPress appends the color and assigns it the new name; the existing color in the target color list remains unchanged. • If you want QuarkXPress to append the color and automatically assign a new name to it, click Auto-Rename. QuarkXPress appends the color and places an asterisk at the beginning of the color name; the existing color in the target color list remains unchanged. • If you want to replace the existing color in the target color list with the color from the source document, click Use New. Chapter 12: Color 322 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 323 Creating and Editing Colors • If you want to keep the existing color in the target color list and do not want to append the color from the source document, click Use Existing. QuarkXPress ignores the color in the source document and does not append it to the target color list. Use the Append Conflict dialog box to indicate what QuarkXPress should do when appending a color with the same name, but with different properties, as a color in the target color list. å When you use standard colors in almost every document you create, you can ensure that those colors are always available using one of the following methods: (1) When no documents are open, create and add them to your application default color list using the Edit & Colors command and clicking New; (2) When no documents are open, import all colors from the color list of another document using the Append button in the Colors dialog box (Edit & Colors) or using the Append command (File & Append). SPECIFYING COLOR-SPECIFIC TRAPPING VALUES P You can specify trapping values for any item color relative to any background color using the Trap Specifications dialog box (Edit & Colors & Edit Trap). You can enter default color-specific trapping values for QuarkXPress, or colorspecific trapping values for individual documents. For information about color-specific trapping, see Chapter 13, “Trapping.” Chapter 12: Color 323 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 324 Creating and Editing Colors CHANGING ALL INSTANCES OF ONE COLOR TO ANOTHER COLOR To globally change all items of one color to another color, either edit the color you want to change to the desired color or: 1 Choose Edit & Colors to display the Colors dialog box. 2 Select the name of a color that you want to delete; then click Delete. An alert displays asking if you want to delete the color and replace it with another color wherever it is used in the document. This alert lets you globally change all items and text of one color to another color. 3 Choose the new color for the items and text from the Replace with pop-up menu. 4 Click OK to apply the new color and close the alert dialog box, then click Save. When you return to the document, all the items and text to which the deleted color was applied will display in the color you chose in the Replace with pop-up menu. å When you are globally changing all items and text from one color to another, remember to save your work before you do so. That way, if you accidentally change everything to the wrong color, you can simply choose File & Revert to Saved to undo the error without losing any of your other work. A P P LY I N G C O L O R , S H A D E , A N D B L E N D S You can apply color and shade to boxes, frames, pictures, text, and lines in a variety of ways to suit your working style in QuarkXPress. To apply colors and shades to boxes, frames, and pictures, you can use the Box and Frame tabs of the Modify dialog box (Item & Modify), or you can use the Colors palette (View & Show Colors). If you want to create many boxes with the same color and shade, you can set tool preferences so the color and shade are added automatically to every box you draw with the tool (Edit & Preferences & Preferences & Tools pane). U S I N G T H E M O D I F Y D I A L O G B O X T O A P P LY C O L O R S To apply colors using the Modify dialog box: 1 Select a box; then choose Item & Modify & Box tab. Chapter 12: Color 324 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 325 Applying Color, Shade, and Blends 2 Choose a color for the box from the Color pop-up menu in the Box area. 3 To specify a shade for the chosen color, choose a value from the Shade pop-up menu or enter a value from 0 to 100% in .1% increments in the Shade field. 4 To specify a frame and frame color for an active box, choose the Frame tab (Item & Modify). The Frame tab (Item & Modify & Frame tab) lets you specify attributes for box frames. • To specify a line width for the frame, choose a value from the Width pop-up menu, or enter a value in .001-point increments in the Width field. The maximum width you can enter depends on the box size. • To specify a frame style, choose a style from the Style pop-up menu. If you choose a style that allows a Gap color (as shown above), additional fields will become available in the Gap area. • To specify a frame color, choose a color from the Color pop-up menu in the Frame area. • To specify a shade for the frame color, choose a value from the Shade pop-up menu or enter a value from 0 to 100% in .1% increments in the Shade field. • To specify a gap color, choose a color from the Color pop-up menu in the Gap area. Gap color is an additional color you can apply between stripes or dashes when using certain line styles. • To specify a shade for the gap color, choose a value from the Shade pop-up menu or enter a value from 0 to 100% in .1% increments in the Shade field. Chapter 12: Color 325 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 326 Applying Color, Shade, and Blends • Click the Apply button in the Modify dialog box to apply attributes to a selected item and to preview them without closing the Modify dialog box. ∫ For HTML text boxes, only the Solid and the Solid Shade (HR) frames are available. However, all frames are available for a raster box. To convert an HTML text box to a raster box, choose Item & Modify and check Convert to Graphic on Export. W If you are using Web-safe colors, make sure all shade values for boxes and frames are set to 100%. When a different percentage of a color is applied, the color is no longer in a Web-safe color palette. W 5 To specify a blend of the box background color and a second color, choose the Box tab (Item & Modify), then: • To specify a blend style, choose a style from the Style pop-up menu in the Blend area. When you do so, additional fields for specifying a blend become available. • To specify an angle for the blend, select a value from the Angle pop-up menu, or enter a custom value from 0° to 360° in the Angle field. • To specify a second color for the blend, choose a color from the Color pop-up menu. • To specify a shade for the second color, choose a value from the Shade pop-up menu or enter a value from 0 to 100% in .1% increments in the Shade field. The fields in the Box and Blend areas of the Box tab let you specify background colors, shades, and blends. Chapter 12: Color 326 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 327 Applying Color, Shade, and Blends 6 Click OK to view the frame and blend for the active box. å You can also specify blends and background screen tints using the Colors palette (View & Show Colors). For more information about applying colors using the Colors palette, see “Using the Colors palette to apply colors” and “Using the Colors palette to create blends” in this chapter. You can make a box transparent by choosing a background color of None from the Color pop-up menu in the Box tab (Item & Modify), or by selecting None in the Colors palette. When a box is transparent, you can see items behind it. You should only use None when something behind the box must show through. If nothing behind a box must show through, use a background color of White. You can apply color to the dark areas of black-and-white bitmap and grayscale pictures by choosing the Color command (Style & Color) when a picture box containing a picture in one of these formats is active. U S I N G T H E C O L O R S PA L E T T E T O A P P LY C O L O R S The Colors palette lets you specify a background color, frame color, and a blend of two colors as the background for a box. To use the Colors palette to add color, shade, and blends to boxes: 1 Select a box; then choose View & Show Colors (F12) to display the Colors palette if the palette is not already displayed. The Colors palette lets you add background colors, frame colors, and blends to boxes. Chapter 12: Color 327 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 328 Applying Color, Shade, and Blends 2 Click the background icon Y at the top of the palette; then click the color you want to apply. You can specify a shade for the selected color either by choosing a value from the shade pop-up menu at the top right corner of the Colors palette, or by entering a value from 0 to 100% in .1% increments in the field next to the shade pop-up menu. ∫ If you are using Web-safe colors, make sure all shade values for boxes and frames are set to 100%. When a different percentage of a color is applied, the color is no longer in a Web-safe color palette. W To apply a color to box frames using the Colors palette: 1 Activate a box with a frame; then choose View & Show Colors (F12) to display the Colors palette if the palette is not already displayed. 2 Click the frame icon J at the top of the palette; then click the color you want to apply. You can specify a shade for the selected color either by choosing a value from the shade pop-up menu at the top right corner of the Colors palette, or by entering a value from 0 to 100% in .1% increments in the field next to the shade pop-up menu. U S I N G T H E C O L O R S PA L E T T E T O C R E AT E B L E N D S A blend in QuarkXPress is a transition from one color to another. You can specify the two blend colors, their shades, the pattern in which they blend, and the angle at which they blend relative to the box. A blend can contain any two colors available in a document. To create a blend of two colors in an active box using the Colors palette: 1 Activate a box; then choose View & Show Colors (F12) to display the Colors palette if the palette is not already displayed. 2 To apply color to the background of the active box, click the background icon Y in the Colors palette. When this icon is selected, the fill-type pop-up menu is displayed in the palette. This menu lets you specify whether you want to apply a Solid color, or a blend of two colors to the background of the active box. 3 To create a blend, choose a blend option from the fill-type pop-up menu. Choosing these options activates the controls that let you specify the two colors for the blend and the angle at which they blend relative to the box. 4 To specify the first color in the blend, click the #1 button, choose a color from the list, and specify the shade you want in the field in the upper right of the Chapter 12: Color 328 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 329 Applying Color, Shade, and Blends palette (by choosing a value from the pop-up menu or entering a value from 0 to 100% in increments as fine as .1%). By default, the background color and shade specified for a box in the Box tab (Item & Modify) will be reported as the #1 color in a blend in the Colors palette. Similarly, the #1 color specified for a box background using the Colors palette will be reported as the background color in the box specifications dialog boxes. 5 To specify the second color in the blend, click the #2 button, choose a color from the list, and specify a shade if you wish. 6 To specify the angle at which the two colors blend, enter a value in the angle field from –360° to 360° in increments as fine as .001°. å As soon as you choose a blend type, QuarkXPress displays the blend in the box. By default, the #1 color is the current box background color. In most cases, the #2 color defaults to White; if the #1 color is White or None, the #2 color defaults to Black. The Accurate Blends check box in the General pane of the Preferences dialog box (Edit & Preferences & Preferences) lets you control the display of twocolor blends on a monitor that is set to 256 colors. To display blends with minimal banding and with the most accurate colors possible, but somewhat slowly, check Accurate Blends. For faster display of blends, uncheck Accurate Blends. This option is checked by default. You can apply background blends to groups that consist of boxes only. å Items, text, and pictures placed in front of a blend will trap to the Indeterminate color if their relationship happens to cause conflicting trapping values. For information about indeterminate trapping, see Chapter 13, “Trapping.” P You can create a gradation of a single color by using white as one of the two colors or by specifying a 0 shade of any color as the second color. SPECIFYING COLOR IN TOOL PREFERENCES QuarkXPress lets you apply color and shade to picture and text boxes automatically as you draw them. To automatically add color and shade as you draw a box: 1 Double-click any of the box tools in the Tools palette to display the Tools pane in the Preferences dialog box. The box tool you double-clicked will be automatically selected for you in the tools list. You can also edit the tool preferences by choosing Edit & Preferences & Preferences & Tools pane. Chapter 12: Color 329 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 330 Applying Color, Shade, and Blends The Tools pane of the Preferences dialog box lets you specify default preferences for any tool. 2 Click Modify to display the Modify dialog box. 3 Click Box to display the Box tab. 4 Choose a box color in the Color pop-up menu. 5 Choose a shade percentage in the Shade pop-up menu, or enter a shade percentage in the Shade field. 6 Click OK to close the Modify dialog box and return to the Preferences dialog box. 7 Click OK to close the Preferences dialog box and return to the document. Every box you draw with the modified tool will automatically apply your color and shade specifications to the box. A P P LY I N G C O L O R A N D S H A D E T O T E X T You can apply color and shade to text four ways: (1) You can apply color and shade using the Style & Color and Style & Shade commands. (2) You can use the Colors palette (View & Show Colors). (3) You can use the Character Style Sheet command (Style & Character Style Sheet) to apply color and shade to selected text using character style sheets you have created. (4) You can use the Character Attributes dialog box (Style & Character). Chapter 12: Color 330 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 331 Applying Color, Shade, and Blends To use menu commands to add color and shade to text: 1 Select some text in an active document; then choose Style & Color and choose the color you want to apply from the Color submenu. 2 Choose Style & Shade and choose the shade percentage you want to apply to the colored text from the Shade submenu; or choose Other from the Shade submenu to display the Character Attributes dialog box, and enter a custom shade percentage in the Shade field. To use the Colors palette to add color and shade to text: 1 Select some text in an active document; then choose View & Show Colors (F12) to display the Colors palette. 2 Click the color you want to apply in the palette. You can specify a shade for the selected color either by choosing a value from the shade pop-up menu or by entering a value from 0 to 100% in .1% increments in the shade field in the top right corner of the Colors palette. To use character style sheets to add color and shade to text: 1 To create a character style sheet, choose Edit & Style Sheets to display the Style Sheets dialog box. The New button pop-up menu lets you create new character style sheets. 2 Click New and choose Character from the New button pop-up menu to display the Edit Character Style Sheet dialog box. 3 Enter a name for the new style sheet in the Name field. 4 Choose a text color from the Color pop-up menu. Chapter 12: Color 331 25530DO.qxd 11.13.01 11:47 AM Page 332 Applying Color, Shade, and Blends 5 Choose a shade percentage from the Shade pop-up menu, or enter a shade percentage from 0 to 100% in the Shade field. The Shade pop-up menu lets you specify shades you can apply to text using character style sheets. 6 Click OK to return to the Style Sheets dialog box. 7 Click Save to save your style sheet and return to the document. 8 Select some text in an active document; then apply the style sheet by choosing it from the Character Style Sheet submenu (Style & Character Style Sheet &