J
jluntz
I think I have been coming accross a typesetting limitation in word in pretty
much every version including the 2007 Beta having to do with the wrapping of
text around a floating figure.
If you make a document with several paragraphs taking up, say, 3/4 of the
first page, then insert a picture that is just less than 1/4 of a page tall
that is positioned to appear, say, at the bottom of a page (or anything else,
not inline with the text), anchored with a locked anchor to the last
paragraph, it will appear at the bottom of the next page. That's fine.
The problem is that if you add a little to the text in some earlier
paragraph such that there is no longer room on the page, not only does the
figure move to the next page, but so does the whole anchoring paragraph (word
REQUIRES that the anchor is on the same page as the figure). This is not ok.
Generally, in an academic paper, you want a figure to appear either on the
page or as soon as possible AFTER it's first reference in the text.
Therefore, you would want to lock the anchor with the referencing paragraph
and let word handle the placement on the current page (if there is room) or
the next page. This is the way Latex does it and also the way openoffice
does, and I really would like word to do it too.
In word, the options are either to position the figure manually, which means
every time you make some changes you have to change all the positions of all
the figures in the document, or leave blank space at the bottom of the page
where the referenceing paragraph SHOULD have gone.
There is a corollary formatting problem, that is if you do re-anchor and
position the figure manually, but want it to appear at the top of the next
page, and the previous page breaks in the middle of a paragraph, you cannot
have the broken paragraph flow around the figure. You could break the
paragraph manually, but if you are doing left and right justification, the
last line of the manually broken paragraph does not justify. Short of
inserting extra spaces between words on that last line, there is no way I can
see to make that happen. I feel that this is a fundamental limitation in
word although I'd be happy to be proven wrong.
Thanks,
Jon
much every version including the 2007 Beta having to do with the wrapping of
text around a floating figure.
If you make a document with several paragraphs taking up, say, 3/4 of the
first page, then insert a picture that is just less than 1/4 of a page tall
that is positioned to appear, say, at the bottom of a page (or anything else,
not inline with the text), anchored with a locked anchor to the last
paragraph, it will appear at the bottom of the next page. That's fine.
The problem is that if you add a little to the text in some earlier
paragraph such that there is no longer room on the page, not only does the
figure move to the next page, but so does the whole anchoring paragraph (word
REQUIRES that the anchor is on the same page as the figure). This is not ok.
Generally, in an academic paper, you want a figure to appear either on the
page or as soon as possible AFTER it's first reference in the text.
Therefore, you would want to lock the anchor with the referencing paragraph
and let word handle the placement on the current page (if there is room) or
the next page. This is the way Latex does it and also the way openoffice
does, and I really would like word to do it too.
In word, the options are either to position the figure manually, which means
every time you make some changes you have to change all the positions of all
the figures in the document, or leave blank space at the bottom of the page
where the referenceing paragraph SHOULD have gone.
There is a corollary formatting problem, that is if you do re-anchor and
position the figure manually, but want it to appear at the top of the next
page, and the previous page breaks in the middle of a paragraph, you cannot
have the broken paragraph flow around the figure. You could break the
paragraph manually, but if you are doing left and right justification, the
last line of the manually broken paragraph does not justify. Short of
inserting extra spaces between words on that last line, there is no way I can
see to make that happen. I feel that this is a fundamental limitation in
word although I'd be happy to be proven wrong.
Thanks,
Jon