londonweb said:Can you add bullet points to a list of text in inDesign CS1 ? How?
many thanks!
Ooh, that's strange. I didn't know that.Sdashiki said:Like option-****-8 i think makes the "degree" temperature sign
I say "i think" because I am at work, on a P.O.S. Dell.
Sdashiki said:HA HA i beat you to it! Nah nah!
speaking of special characters, you can (in OSX) use the option key in combo with the keyboard characters to create "special" characters.
Like option-****-8 i think makes the "degree" temperature sign.
Mydriasis said:I'd go with the paragraph style like Lau suggested. Or do you do your formating using the space bar?![]()
Sdashiki said:and how do i do these things in Windows?
fireball370 said:this will apply a bullet or special charcater to a list:
open your paragraph palette.
go to the little arrow in the top corner.
click on bullets and numbering.
fireball370 said:I'm on a mac, and I don't remember what the palettes look like in windows. I *think* they look the same?![]()
londonweb said:This is weird because on my version there is no bullets and numbering option. Also if I look it up in help, nothing comes up. I'm using CS1
No. To type special characters you have to learn complicated altkey+longstringofnumbersonlyfromthekeypad combinations.Sdashiki said:in windows, what is this equivalent, does it exist?
I had no idea option-0 did the same as option-shift-8! Kind of strange. I've been using option-shift-8 for years.tobefirst said:I've always been using Option-0
They are different characters. Shift-option-8 is a real degree symbol, while option-0 is a superscripted letter o used with numbering in some languages. (option-0 is for masculine , option-9 for feminine)apfhex said:I had no idea option-0 did the same as option-shift-8! Kind of strange. I've been using option-shift-8 for years.
It could be worse, an active demi could have picked up on the idea and made a plague of it.dogbone said:I'm almost regretting that thread about you know what.![]()
If you're referring to setting up a hanging indent, not much fiddling needed. Shouldn't take more than ten or twenty seconds in the tab ruler. Set it up as a paragraph style and you're ready to rock and roll.jovenfuego said:If you want to do bullets in InDesign (I'm assuming you want to sorta imitate MS Word) you will need to fiddle around with the tabs function. Hopefully this helps a bit.
Actually, a simple cmd-\ will create a hanging indent without ever going into the tabs or paragraph palette.Snark said:If you're referring to setting up a hanging indent, not much fiddling needed. Shouldn't take more than ten or twenty seconds in the tab ruler. Set it up as a paragraph style and you're ready to rock and roll.
Snark
Shoot, I thought there was a shortcut for that, but I'm used to setting them manually and couldn't remember for sure.tobefirst said:Actually, a simple cmd-\ will create a hanging indent without ever going into the tabs or paragraph palette.