Posts Tagged ‘spacing’

LINE SPACING IN MS WORD 2007

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

We all have our own way of setting up our own document – our own “look” sot to speak. Many folks like single spacing in their documents. Me, I prefer lots of room between my lines of text simply because it is easier for me to read and edit. In any event, line spacing is a very important factor in your document formatting.

The default line spacing in version 2007 is 1.15. Luckily, it is fairly simple to format your line spacing in this version.

Follow the steps below to learn how:

  1. On the Home tab of your Ribbon, in the Paragraph group, click on the Line Spacing button.
  2. You will see lots of choices, such as 1, 1.15, 1.5, 2, 2.5 or 3.
  3. Select the line spacing that you prefer.
  4. For a more granular line spacing, in the Spacing menu, click on Line Spacing Options.

Told you it was easy didn’t I?

LINE AND PARAGRAPH SPACING IN MS WORD 2010

Thursday, February 24th, 2011

Modify Paragraph Spacing
It is very easy to change the spacing before or after the paragraphs in your document. You can simply select the paragraph(s) where you would like to change the spacing and click on the Page Layout tab, here find the Paragraph group. Now choose the new spacing values in the form of points here.

ParagraphSpacing

Modify Line Spacing

You learned the method to change the space before and after paragraphs above. Now you will learn how you can change line spacing in your document. As above, it is very easy.

Click the Home menu and go to the Paragraph section and in the Line Spacing option, select the spacing of your choice. You can double the line spacing by choosing 2 or triple it by choosing 3, etc.

LineSpacing

You can also remove spacing before or after the paragraph from this option.

On your Home tab, in the Paragraph group, click on little arrow in bottom right corner.
Under Spacing, make sure that both Before and After are 0 pt.

If you want to permanently set your document Line spacing:

On the Home tab, click Line Spacing, and then click Line Spacing Options.

Select the options of your choice (including the paragraph spacing), and then click Set As Default. When Word prompts you, click All documents based on the Normal.dotm template, and then click OK.

Legal Line Spacing in MS Word

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

A lot of legal secretaries have written to me asking for ways to quickly change the line spacing in a document as they are frequently moving from single line spacing for block quotes and double line spacing for text and then back to single line spacing for signature blocks in pleadings.

It really isn’t all that difficult. If you find that you are frequently changing the line spacing in MS Word to double or you are making the switch more often than not, it’s time to take measures so that this happens seamlessly and without lots of time and keystrokes.

After speaking with more than a few of these secretaries I found that most of them were using the Normal style in their documents and so I will assume for this tip that everyone is, although hopefully not!

I could tell you how to modify your Normal.dot style, which is the style on which you base every new document in MS Word, but I don’t see the point to that because then every document you create would have double line spacing. Wouldn’t that be a fine howdy do?

Instead, I will give you a quick key combination to use to change your line spacing on the fly in your documents.

When you are setting up your document using the Normal.dot style, everything will be in single line spacing.

Once you have typed the heading of your pleading, you now want to start using double line spacing so place your cursor where you want that spacing to start and depress and hold your CTRL key and click the number 2 on your keyboard.

That’s it! When you want to go back to single spacing, depress and hold your CTRL key and click on the number 1 on your keyboard.

Quick and easy, just the way I like it!

 

Having said all of that, if you are a legal secretary and are in a practice where you have lots of pleadings, it would behoove you to start using styles and/or templates – they make your life soooo much easier and it makes you look sooo professional!