Operation Manual

Working with Text 127
3. Select the manner in which text will wrap around the object by
clicking a sample, i.e.
4. Choose which side(s) the chosen wrapping method will be applied,
again by clicking a sample.
The examples show tight wrapping applies to the right of the object
only.
5. Click OK.
In addition, you can specify the Distance from text: the "standoff" between the
object's wrap outline and adjacent text. (The wrap outline is a contour that
defines the object's edges for text wrapping purposes.) Different object types
have different initial wrap outlines. For QuickShapes, the wrap outline
corresponds exactly to the object's edges, while for closed shapes the outline is a
rectangle.
You can manually adjust the wrap outline using the Curve context toolbar for
more precise text fitting. See PagePlus help for more information.
Creating a bulleted or numbered list
You can turn a series of paragraphs into bulleted, numbered or multi-level
lists. Bullets are especially useful when listing items of interest in no specific
order of preference, numbered lists for presenting step-by-step procedures (by
number or letter), and multi-level lists for more intelligent hierarchical lists with
prefixed numbers, symbols, or a mix of both, all with supporting optional text
(see Using multi-level lists on p. 129).