In Word for Mac OS X, click the paragraph icon in the Standard toolbar. If you don't see the icon, from the View menu, choose Toolbars, and then check Standard. This is document ajfe in the Knowledge Base. Microsoft Word supports printable grid lines to help you enter and locate data on your business. Your data table can also display grid lines as cell borders.
Do you have any idea how to set a document in Microsoft Word to have exactly 25 lines per page? That’s what the agents and publishers I’m approaching want as a standard format, (1″ margins and 25 lines) but every attempt I’ve made to do that has fallen short one way or another — the occasional 24 or 26 lines.
I’ve queried a lot of my other writer friends, but their solutions don’t quite work. They may not be Mac folks. If you don’t have an answer I’m going to be doing a lot of line counting and eyeballing of pages. An interesting question and one whose answer is more subtle than it may initially seem. I asked my friend Allan Wyatt, author of my favorite newsletter, for his assistance. Here’s what he shared with me: “It is probably because he has orphan/widow control turned on for the paragraph styles he is using. Turn it off, and it should be fine.” Before I show you how to do that, however, let’s look at how to set a document to have 25 lines per page.
It’s ridiculously complex, sorry to say. Here’s what Allan explains: “There is no setting where you indicate “number of lines per page” because most places never worry about that anymore. Instead, you have to calculate it. Start your font size.
(A fairly standard font is 10-point, so I will use that in the following calculations.). If you display the Indents and Spacing tab of the Paragraph dialog box (Format Paragraph), the Line Spacing should be set to “Single.” This allows Word to calculate a normal line spacing, which typographically is 120% of your font size. In other words, with 10-point type you end up with 12-point line space, baseline to baseline. (If you use a different font size, this will obviously change. There are 72 points in an inch, so that means you can get 6 lines per inch if you are using single line spacing with a 10-point font.
(72 / 12 = 6). If you have 1-inch top margin and 1-inch bottom margin on your page (Format Document), that means you have 9 inches of printable space on a standard 11-inch sheet of paper. If you have 6 printed lines per inch (step 3) and 9 inches of printable space (step 4), that means you have 54 printed lines per page. You can adjust margins, font size, or line spacing as necessary to get a desired number of lines per page. If you need to print double-space lines, then use the Indents and Spacing tab of the Paragraph dialog box (Format Paragraph) to set the Line Spacing to “Double.” The only thing this does to your calculations is to divide the number of lines per page (step 5) by 2.
If you can follow all of that, you can set your document to be exactly 25 lines per page. This is a bit late to help the original person, but in case anyone else would like to know Word does indeed have a feature for specifying the number of lines per page (often called a “baseline grid” in typography or design circles). This divides the usable portion of the page into a fixed number of lines or spaces, and sets the type (wherever possible) within those lines. The feature is not normally enabled in Word. That’s because Microsoft implemented the feature for certain languages that absolutely require it, such as Japanese. In order to access and use the feature, you must tell Word to install those features (even though you won’t actually type Japanese, of course).
The instructions for enabling it may be slightly different for Word 2003 and Word 2007. Here are the instructions for Word 2007: 1. Shut down Word.
Go to Start Programs Microsoft Office Microsoft Office Tools, and select Microsoft Office 2007 Language settings. (This for Windows XP. For Vista, the navigation may be different.) 3. In the dialog, navigate through the left pane (Available Editing Languages) and select an appropriate language (I recommend Japanese, since I know it works).
Click the Add button, so that Japenese is added to the right pane (Enabled Editing Languages). You will probably see a message or note that the language is available only with “limited support”. Ignore this (it just means that Windows isn’t set up to use a Japense keyboard).
If you see any more notes about limited support, close or cancel them. They don’t matter. Click Page Layout Margins Custom Margins. This opens the Page Setup dialog, which usually contains three Tabs: Margins, Paper, and Layout. However, you should now notice that a new Tab has been added, called Document Grid.
Select the Document Grid tab. Under Grid Options, select “Specofy line grid only”. Under the Lines option, specify the number of lines you want per page.
Tip: if your document is divided into sections, and you want to apply this setting to the entire document, make sure to select “Whole document” in the “Apply to:” list at the bottom of the dialog. Then click OK to exist this dialog. Note that Word’s normal Line Spacing options, such as “single”, “double” and “multiple”, now become relative to the grid (instead of to the pointsize of the type). That is “single” will set the text using single grid lines, “double” will vertically center each line of text over two lines of grid, etc. All the usual caveats of using grids still exist: if you use a pointsize larger than one grid line, Word will automatically use multples of the grid. (So if your grid works out at about 18pt, and you use 24pt type, each line will be centered vertically over 2 grid lines). With grid lines, it makes no sense to use above/below paragraph spacing based on points or inches.
If you do, the type will be pushed off the grid. If you want extra spacing, it should be measured in “lines”. Word allows this. For example, I have a style that I use for scene breaks in novels, where I want one extra line of space above the paragraph.
This is specified as “1 line” (without quotes) in Paragraph Spacing: Before. You can specify “2 line”, “3 line” (the word line is always singular). Word takes this to mean “lines of grid spacing”. You can specify fractional lines, though of course that will push the type off the grid. Here’s a tip if you sometimes use larger type and want the following text to re-align to the grid. For example, I set chapter headings in 24pt. My basic page is 30 lines (works out about 19.2pt), and my normal body size is 11pt.
I start each chapter as a new section (using the Section: Next Page, Section: Odd Page, or Section: Even Page options). I want my text to start half-way down the page, with the chapter heading centered vertically in the space above. I experimented with various “Space before/after” options and found none of them worked properly: my body text always fell off the grid! Then I worked it out: for the chapter heading, do not specify any space before/after the paragraph.
Instead, specify the Line Spacing option (under Paragraph Formatting) as “Multiple”, then enter the number of grid lines that you want the heading centered over. In my case, that was half a page, which is 15 lines. So I specified the heading to have a Line Spacing of Multiple: 15.
Works perfectly! If you want to see the grid lines on screen, turn them on using View Gridlines.
One final note: the number of grid lines that you specify, is literally the number of gridlines between the margins. Headers and Footers fall outside this grid.
But the main point is that the number of lines of text is always one less than the number of gridlines. So if you specify 30 grid lines per page, you will get 29 lines of type. That’s because in Word, these are not strictly “baselines”. The visual effect is the same, but these lines mark the upper/lower bounds of each text line. So the first gridline marks the top of the first line of type. The second gridline marks the bottom of the first line of type, and the top of the second line.
The third gridline, marks the bottom of the second line of type (and the top of the third). So each line of type requires two gridlines. Therefore, if you want 30 actual lines of text on a page, set gridlines to 31. If you 28 lines of text, set gridlines to 29. Gridlines is always “lines of text, plus one”. Lines of text is always “gridlines minus one”.
Zack — cheers, glad it was of assistance. I was not notified of your reply, so only just saw it. In the latest version of Word (I’m using Office 365), I notice you have to define all your paragraph styles to use “Snap to grid when document grid is defined”. My previous instructions didn’t mention this, and I don’t have the means to test whether it was also the case on the versions I was using back then. But, at least in Office 365, if you don’t set this attribute on, some paragraphs may indeed fall off the grid. For example, my previous post mentioned a “Scene break” style.
At the time, this was a variation of my Normal paragraph style, with two changes: no First Line indent, and 1 line of Space Before. I recently created an additional style, which is similar but also has 1 line of Space Below. (This style is intended for a single # character, centered on the line, with 1 line of space above and below, as a more visual clue to the scene break.) When I created this style, I forgot to check the “Snap to grid” option — with the result that the following text (in my Normal style) fell off the grid!
This occurred even though my new style was entirely defined in units of grid lines. As soon as I checked that option, everything fell back into place. I don’t know if something like this was causing the issue you mentioned. I’m not sure what else to suggest, except to go through your styles and formatting in detail to ensure there no units or values that would throw text off-grid. Actually, Dave, Dave’s (This could get confusing!) solution makes use of Word’s line-numbering feature to avoid both the calculations in your solution and the necessity of counting lines in the OP’s current practice. Dave (Starr) makes this clear in his last two paragraphs.
One thing that’s not clear in his post, though is how adjustments to the ‘side’ (ie. Left and right) margins changes the number of lines on a page.
My choice would be the top and bottom margins, with the larger change assigned to the bottom margin. Also, assuming Word permits saving empty documents with assigned margin, spacing, font and size settings, the last step in the process would be to delete the text from a copy of the document, then save it as a template for future use. Regards, Barry. The method described certainly can be made to work but it’s perhaps overly complex.
Word has much simpler tools built in. Line numbering is a very common requirement in legal contract work, depositions and court reporting, screen-writing and some other professional uses of Word. It is built in and very easy to use: See Word Help: —————————— Add line numbers to an entire document On the File menu, click Page Setup, and then click the Layout tab. In the Apply to box, click Whole document. Click Line Numbers. Select the Add line numbering check box, and then select the options you want. ——————– An average page of double-spaced text in 10 or 12 point fonts is 25 lines and if submitting work to a publisher double spaced is almost always what they want.
So I would first do as you suggest, turn off “widows and orphans”, type what I needed to say fiddling with lines per page while creating sounds counter-productive, Then turn on double line spacing and turn on line numbering. I tried this on a couple documents and the adjusting to get 25 lines per page is very easy, at worst just a couple clicks in or out on the default side margins. You can print the document with line numbers on, or save and turn line numbers off before printing as required by your customer.
Hope this helps Dave.
A while back, I showed you how to make graph paper using Excel—it's a neat trick. You can display gridlines in Word—but you can't print them. That's a pretty big limitation.
However, Word's gridlines are meant to be guide rules, not printable borders. As guide rules, gridlines can be very useful for positioning objects, pictures, even text. To enable Word's gridlines in Word 2007/2010, do the following:. Click the Page Layout tab. Click the Align dropdown in the Arrange group. Check View Gridlines. To disable gridlines, uncheck View Gridlines.
To control the gridlines, choose Grid Settings from the Align dropdown. These settings let you enable snap-to grids, snap-to objects, adjust the size of the gridlines, and more. The most interesting to me, is the Use Margins option in the Grid Options section. If you uncheck this option, Word will extend the grid to the margins.
In Word 2003, enable gridlines as follows:. On the Drawing toolbar, click Draw. Click Grid. Check Display Gridlines. Unfortunately, I am unable to determine any way to print these gridlines and every resource I've consulted confirms that you can not print Word's gridlines. If you know of a way to print Word's gridlines, please share!
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