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Typesetting 2016 - The do's and do not's
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Since all I ever do is make my manuscript in Word, and then convert to PDF for Create Space, I would say it is fine for what I do.

If you run into snags or something that gives you fits, there's always someone here who can talk you through it, so keep that in mind!



A.J.

So I'm working on my paperback version of Windcatcher and looking through some stuff on the net. I started working in Word and feel like I get a decent file out of it, but ..."
Font looks good on the PDF.


I personally don't find much value in most of the criticisms of Word, as they rarely focus on things that make a material difference to readers.

A.J."
Open your document in word, click on home>paragraphs and spacing >line spacing options > line and page breaks. Widow and orphan control is on the left, just click the box.

Yes en that is turned on, but I do not actually know what it does, nothing happens when I select this option, no matter if I have text selected or not. What I do currently is select the paragraph text and right click font, than advanced tab, to change the spacing to expanded or condensed with steps of 0,05 pt until the issue is solved.
I don't think the eye noticed such small adjustments and it does result in letting the orphan jump back a line usually.
If you have a better way/suggestion, I'm all ears.
A.J.

Yes en that is turned on, but I do not actually know what it does, nothing happens when I select this option, no matter if I have text selected or not. What I do currently is select the par..."
Hi A.J,
On the home section there is an editing feature on the far right, click on 'select all' then follow the previous directions I gave you. That should reflect it all through your document then, although you might have to re-align your titles and chapter headings etc to center them again. I learnt a lot from the 'how to' guides that are on youtube and google to start with and have put it into practice.
Hope this helps you?
Widow and orphan control is basically keeping words together on one line. ie. 'far-fetched' Instead of having the word 'far' on one line and 'fetched' on the one underneath it, it keeps them together as one word.
If you look at the sample text at the bottom of the drop down list it shows how each of the changes you make affect your document too.

For short documents you can often solve the problem by going via Notepad (which strips out all the formatting), but that wouldn't work for a novel. Programs like Ulysses avoid the problem by making you write in plain text.
Whatever program you use is up to you; I shouldn't think the Book Police are going to come and arrest you for using Word. Just check it through to make sure your formatting is all OK before you do anything important with it.
Besides, I've heard that in traditional publishing, everyone has to submit in Word - so it can't be too bad!

I work several different gigs, so my Word formatting is constantly getting changed. Rather than stress about it, I just reformat when I am doing layout and easy peasy.

I ..."
To solve that you can clear all previous formatting by clicking on a little red crayon just under the word 'mailings' in the top task bar and it will give you a clean sheet to work with. You can also set up macro editing to set features of your document that you always use too, Page size, margins, paragraphing, spacing etc. You know, the stuff you always set but takes time to do! lol After that, it's one click and it's all done for you.

For technical and scientific works I use Latex only. Nothing beats that even today :)
I'm actually thinking about setting up my style in Latex and dump LO/Word altogether.
Books mentioned in this topic
Windcatcher (other topics)Windcatcher (other topics)
So I'm working on my paperback version of Windcatcher and looking through some stuff on the net. I started working in Word and feel like I get a decent file out of it, but now I see many websites/videos/blogs/etc. online that scream do not use Words for typesetting etc. However these are mostly post from 2013 and before, so have things changed much?
Are the 2016 versions of Words (Office365) better equiped for typesetting, or should one still go to programs like the free LYX or LATEX, or the more expensive Adobe InDesign to get a good result?
A second question I have is if people can give me an opinion on using Adobe Garamond font for my book. I like the Garamond font, but noticed with the original font that italics (which are quite often used for my "dragon speak") were completely skewed. So I went to the Adobe version of the font, and italics look much better there, but I still wonder if it is okay to read for people.
I have uploaded an extract from chapter 8 for people to download (and print if needed as paper reads very different than on the screen). Are there any willing people out there to take a look at the PDF and give me some opinions on ease of reading?
Link to PDF
Much appreciated!
- A.J. Norfield