Operation Manual

Working with Text 121
word marked as bold would remain bold when the paragraph style was
updated or changed.
A character style includes only font attributes (name, point size, bold, italic,
etc.), and you apply it at the character levelthat is, to a range of selected
charactersrather than to the whole paragraph.
Typically, a character style applies emphasis (such as italics, bolding
or color) to whatever underlying font the text already uses; the
assumption is that you want to keep that underlying font the same. The
base character style is shown in the Text Styles tab (or palette) as
"Default Paragraph Font," which has no specified attributes but
basically means "whatever font the paragraph style already uses."
Applying the Default Paragraph Font option from the Text Styles tab
(or the Text context toolbar's Styles box) will strip any selected local
character formatting you've added and will restores original text
attributes (paragraph styles are not affected).
As with paragraph styles, you can define any number of new character
styles using different names and attributes (or adopt a pre-defined
character style).
Working with named styles
The named style of the currently selected text is displayed
in either the Text Styles tab or the drop-down Styles box on the Text context
toolbar. A character style (if one is applied locally) may be shown; otherwise it
indicates the paragraph style.
To apply a named style:
1. Using the Pointer Tool, click in a paragraph (if applying a paragraph
style) or select a range of text (if applying a character style).
2. Display the Text Styles tab and select a style from the style list.
- or -
On the Text context toolbar, click the arrow to expand the Styles drop-
down list and select a style name.
The Text Style tab highlights the paragraph or character style applied to any
selected text.