In the last module we covered about Edit Menu in InPage. Now it is time to learn the part of the software that turns plain words into a clean, professional design. That part is the Format menu, and it is where most of the real magic happens.
I have spent more than a decade formatting Urdu books, newspaper pages, and wedding cards in InPage, and I can tell you that once you understand this single menu, your work will look sharper and you will finish it much faster. In this module I will walk you through the Character, Paragraph, and Table commands in simple, easy steps that anyone can follow.
The Format menu sits in the top menu bar of the software. It controls how your text and objects look on the page. Think of it as the control room for your whole design.
You will find it at the top of your screen, sitting among the other main menus. Click on it once and a drop-down list opens. From here you can reach three main commands that we will cover one by one:
One golden rule from my own experience: always select your text first, then open the menu. InPage applies your changes only to the text you have highlighted.
The Character command is where you style your words. To use it, highlight your text, open the Format menu, and click Character. A small box opens with several useful settings:
From experience, I suggest changing only one setting at a time when you are starting out. This way you can clearly see what each option does before you begin combining them and If you have trouble using any character (Unicode) from the Interent than I highly suggest using our Unicode to InPage text tool.
InPage also lets you draw a line above or below a word, which is useful for underlining a heading or marking an important term. Simply highlight the word, open the Character box, and turn on the top line or bottom line option. It is a small touch, but it makes key words stand out beautifully.
Inside the paragraph settings you will also find border and tab options.
One feature Urdu users truly love is the stretch letters, or kashida technique. It lengthens the connecting strokes between letters to fill a line evenly and give that flowing, hand-written Nastaliq look. I use it often to make poetry verses and headings sit gracefully across the full width of a line.
Two more handy tools live in this area as well.
These two commands control the space around your text and objects.
The Format menu hides a few extra features that are well worth learning:
By the end of the next and last module, you’ll be able to design, organize, and publish a fully formatted book with confidence in: Book Composition in InPage