Mac Os X Pages Paragraph

I did a little testing on this page. Tap and hold on a word till it is highlighted. Quickly drag the lower blue handle off the bottom edge of the paragraph and release. Now the whole paragraph is selected. Alternatively, drag the upper blue handle off the top edge of the paragraph. Without warning (or clues that the release was so close), Apple has posted the eighth incremental update to its Leopard operating system – Mac OS X 10.5.8. The update, available in both Client.

  1. Mac Os X Pages Paragraph Creator

Pages for OS X was updated to version 4.3 on December 4, 2012, to support Pages 1.7 for iOS, which was released on the same day. Pages for iOS 1.7.1 introduced better compatibility with Word and Pages for Mac, and version 1.7.2, released on March 7, 2013, merely added stability improvements and bugfixes. Mac OS X Part 3 The University of Utah Student Computing Labs Macintosh Support mac@scl.utah.edu. Basic overview of Mac OS X’s interface.

Hi David! The second problem can I answer. When checking the Facing pages you get the pages side by side and stays that way when Facing pages is de-checked. The thing is now you don't have Facing pages but still two pages beside each other without being facing pages. I know you just said that, but there is a difference which I wont go into.
To get the page above each other go down in the left bottom corner of the page window. Click on the zoom number (i.e. 125%). The popup menu will let you choose between One up or Two up!!!!!!
The first question could be that Pages can have problems at the end of very large documents. Try changing the paragraph in the beginning of the document (I presume you want the same paragraph layout through out the document) and redefine the Style for the paragraph. If you have used paragraph style before the change all paragraphs will adopt the new style.
If the blue dashes are horizontal you have turned on Outline feature. Click on the Outline icon on the tool bar and you'll get back to the actual writing space.
Message was edited by: fruhulda

Dec 7, 2010 7:50 AM

Mac OS X (the operating system on a Mac) comes with some Apple applications, such as Safari to browse the Web, Mail to, well, receive and send email, iCal as calendar, etc...


One of those appllications is called TextEdit, and you'll find it in your Applications folder (which should be sitting in the rightmost part of the Dock, at the bottom of your screen). It's a very basic text processor/editor, but it may fit your needs.


You can also try a variant based on it, called Bean, which offers a whole slew of features TextEdit doesn't have. If you want something more refined and are willing to pay the price, you can opt for Microsoft Office for Mac, or a freeware such as OpenOffice, LibreOffice or NeoOffice (all three are cousins).

10.8


You can also try the latest version of Apple's iWork suite, which you might just adopt after a while. It's quite good.


You'll find all those apps and software via your favorite search engine...

Mac Os X Pages Paragraph Creator

Nov 16, 2013 2:59 AM