Formatting Text in a Text Box
Text
in a text box is basically the same as text in a document; it just fits
in a smaller space. A text box can hold multiple paragraphs, including
numbered and bulleted lists. You can format a text box’s text in just
about all the same ways you format a document’s body text. Select the
text in the box; then apply formats from the Font and Paragraph groups
of the Home tab. Text in a text box can be formatted with styles, too.
You can also do a couple of neat tricks with a text box’s text:
- Change text direction:
By default, text is aligned horizontally in a text box. You can set
text to run vertically, reading either from top to bottom (rotated 90
degrees) or from bottom to top (rotated 270 degrees). Figure 6
shows an example of how rotated text can be used to create a cool
effect and make use of limited page space. To change text direction,
click the text box to activate the Format tab, click Text Direction,
and then choose an option from the drop-down menu.
- Change text alignment: You
can vertically align text at the top, center, or bottom of a text box.
To set the alignment, go to the Format tab, click Align Text, and then
choose an option from the drop-down menu.
Linking Text Boxes
You can use multiple text boxes to create fancy or
complicated-looking layouts. For example, if you’re designing a
multicolumn document but don’t want to mess with columns, you can use
text boxes instead. Or if you want to create a boxed “sidebar” that
spans two pages of a document, you can use two text boxes (one on each
page) to hold the sidebar’s content.
The key to tricks like this is linking.
When you link two or more text boxes, Word treats them as though they
are a single box. When you fill the first box with text, just keep
typing; the text jumps to the next box and continues there.
Creating Linked Text Boxes
To make the linking process easy, start by creating all the text boxes you’re going to need. Here’s a simple example:
1. | Create two text boxes. Figure 7 shows two empty text boxes; the first is at the bottom of one page, and the second is at the top of the following page.
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2. | Click the first text box. The Format tab appears on the ribbon.
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3. | Click Create Link. The mouse pointer changes to the shape of a pitcher.
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4. | Point
to the second text box, and notice that the pitcher is tilted to look
like its contents are pouring into the second text box, as shown in Figure 8.
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5. | Click the second text box. It is now linked to the first text box.
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The linking process goes a little differently if you
need to link three or more boxes. Suppose you have four boxes; in this
case, you would start by linking box 3 to box 4, then link box 2 to box
3, and finally link box 1 to box 2. Sounds crazy, but it works.