Manual

. Fill in the dialog box:
Character Weight (%). Select the weight of the characters. Select
any weight from 75 to 125.
Character Width (%). Select the width of the characters. Select any
width from 25 to 200.
Character Spacing. Select the spacing between characters. Select
any spacing from -150 to 500.
4. Click on Apply.
5. Click on Close.
Changing fonts
Fonts are different typefaces that define how each character appears on
screen and when printed. Each character has a unique design that varies from
font to font.
Word Processing contains sereral different fonts. The URW Mono font is most
like a typewriter font. It is mootospaced: every character uses the same
amount of space. The other fonts are proportionally spaced., the space
taken by a character is relative to the character's width. For example, the letter
i uses less space than w.
l_ To change the font:
Tosee a sample of the
font, select Fonts fromthe
Charactermenu; then
select Font Viewer.
Youcan also select
fontsfrom the Fonts
submenuin the
Character menu.
1. Select the text to change.
2. Click-on theFon_ iC_YrYon _e Basic Functions tool bar. A drop-douPa
menu of fonts appears.
3. Select the font. The selected text appears in the font you selected.
Changing text sizes
Ifyou usea large font
3ize, above 72points,
you may need to
increase the line
spacing. Select Line
Spacing fromthe
Paragraph menu.
Text size determines how tall and wide a character is and is usually
measured in points, a measurement used in the printing industry. A point is
approximately 1/72 of an inch. Therefore, 72 point text is one inch tall. Most
books and magazines are written with 10 or 12 point text.
You can select from standard point sizes (9 through 72 points) or create a
custom text size.
Word Processing 13