![]() Or maybe the styles are based on two or three. If the paragraph styles were set up using the based-on feature, maybe you need to change only one style (if you're very lucky) and the change will propagate to all styles. When you are finished, click the OK button to exit Document Setup. You will only be able to add the other paragraph styles after the special table is created. Best to do it directly to the frame on the page via the Properties Palette instead. To change attributes in paragraph styles, you can do that manually in the Paragraph Style Options window, or you can script it. Paragraph Style to the top level paragraph style created for the special table, such as TOC1. The Story Editor isn't a good place to apply formatting (for the most part). So, the answer is: You can't apply a new paragraph style without losing the character formatting unless your document is set-up in the right way, unfortunately. Without having the actual document to experiment with it's difficult to say. ![]() DeanEM. Styles are easy to set-up and deploy so it's well worth getting used to them. To change the paragraph before and after spacing you need to be using a paragraph style (PF3) rather than direct formatting. It sounds like you've imported your text from an ODT file so you might be able to change the styles to do this but it would depend on how the text was imported and what styles were created during the import process. 1 November 12, 2017, 02:04:21 PM Welcome to the forum DeanEM.TFAD. In the request, if you set 'includeStyling' to true, you will get style spans. This way, when you want to make a change, you simply modify the relevant character style and everything is changed automatically. In the request, if you set 'includeStyling' to true, you will get style spans. Create character styles, then create paragraph styles based on the character styles. The trick is to use styles from the start. Scribus could be smarter in how it does this but it currently isn't. You may want to select all the paragraphs and. ![]() ODT files can typically be imported along with their paragraph styles. Using a consistent paragraph style would also allow you to forego the leading tabs to indent each paragraph. ![]() Scribus can't accept the bold character formatting and convert that formatting to a different bold variant because it has no bold variant to apply. Scribus Computer Science Scribus Scribus Scribus under Linux Mint Developer(s). Then you apply a new paragraph style which uses a different font where you have no bold variant. When you apply a paragraph style you are saying "Apply this style to all of the text in this paragraph and disregard all previous character formatting." Scribus probably does it this way as the existing character formatting may not be compatible with the newly-applied paragraph style.įor instance, say you have some character formatting that uses a bold font variant. Unfortunately you can't apply a different paragraph style without discarding the already-applied character styles/formatting. ![]()
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