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USING INDESIGN
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Last updated 11/16/2011
• Press Shift+Ctrl+Alt+' (Windows) or Shift+Command+Option+' (Mac OS) to switch between turning on and off
the Use Typographer’s Quotes preferences option.
The character frequently used to indicate feet, arcminutes, or minutes of time is the prime mark. It looks like a slanted
apostrophe. The character frequently used to indicate inches, arcseconds, or seconds of time is the double prime mark.
These symbols are different from apostrophes and double quotation marks. Some fonts include the prime and double
prime marks. Use the Glyphs panel to insert these marks. If the font doesn’t have a prime or double prime mark, insert
the straight quotation mark, and italicize it.
Insert white space characters
A white space character is a blank space that appears between characters. You can use white-space characters for many
different purposes, such as preventing two words from being broken at the end of a line.
1 Using the Type tool, position the insertion point where you want to insert a certain amount of white space.
2
Choose Type > Insert White Space, and then select one of the spacing options (such as Em Space) in the context menu.
Representative symbols of the white-space characters appear when you choose Type > Show Hidden Characters.
White space options
The following options appear on the Type > Insert White Space menu:
Em Space Equal in width to the size of the type. In 12-point type, an em space is 12 points wide.
En Space One-half the width of an em space.
Nonbreaking Space The same flexible width as pressing the spacebar, but it prevents the line from being broken at
the space character.
Nonbreaking Space (Fixed Width) A fixed width space prevents the line from being broken at the space character,
but does not expand or compress in justified text. The fixed width space is identical to the Nonbreaking Space
character inserted in InDesign CS2.
Third Space One-third the width of an em space.
Quarter Space One-fourth the width of an em space.
Sixth Space One-sixth the width of an em space.
Flush Space Adds a variable amount of space to the last line of a fully justified paragraph, useful for justifying text
in the last line. (See
“Change Justification settings” on page 288.)
Hair Space One-twenty-fourth the width of an em space.
Thin Space One-eighth the width of an em space. You may want to use a thin space on either side of an em dash or
en dash.
Figure Space Same width as a number in the typeface. Use a figure space to help align numbers in financial tables.
Punctuation Space Same width as an exclamation point, period, or colon in the typeface.
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