Page break paragraph style

Linda G. Gallagher lindag at techcomplus.com
Tue Apr 3 14:54:53 PDT 2007


Well, I knew there was a reason, but I could not think of it. Stuart,
Lester, Fred, and Mike hit the nail on the head. I'll recommend sticking
with the page break that with the space after.

I'm not sure I'd suggest Matt's idea of resizing the page frame. That might
work in some cases, but you could end with a number of odd looking pages, in
my view.

Here's another quick one. Are there Windows keyboard shortcuts to switch
from Body pages to Master pages, etc.? I feel like I've seen someone use
something faster than Esc v B, Esc v R, and Esc v M that I found in the
help. 

Thanks all!!!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Linda G. Gallagher
TechCom Plus, LLC
lindag at techcomplus dot com
www.techcomplus.com
303-450-9076 or 800-500-3144
User guides, online help, FrameMaker and
WebWorks ePublisher templates
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Manager, STC Consulting and Independent
Contracting SIG
http://www.stcsig.org/cic/index.html
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 


-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Wickham [mailto:mewickham at compuserve.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, April 03, 2007 3:34 PM
To: Linda G. Gallagher; Frame Users
Subject: Re: Page break paragraph style

Linda,

The method you use actually produces a column break that moves the _next_
paragraph to the top of the next column. Setting Pagination to Top of Column
(or Top of Page) moves the _current_ paragraph to the top of the next column
(or page).

I prefer your method. It works a bit like Special> Page Break> At Top of
Next Available Column, except that Frame doesn't see it as an override. So
Remove Overrides won't undo it. I also prefer your method because it
requires only one special paragraph format and leaves me to decide which
kind of paragraph will be at the top of the next column or page. Using the
Pagination settings requires a paragraph format for each paragraph style you
might want to have follow a break. For example, in addition to a Heading1
format that can start mid-column, you might need something like a
Heading1ColBreak format and Heading1PageBreak.

I'd keep doin' it the way you're doin' it!

Mike Wickham

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Linda G. Gallagher" <lindag at techcomplus.com>
To: <framers at lists.frameusers.com>
Sent: Tuesday, April 03, 2007 3:31 PM
Subject: Page break paragraph style


>
> Framers,
>
> Years ago, I learned from this list about creating a paragraph style to
> use
> for page breaks. I've always done this using something like 800 pts of
> space
> after for the page break paragraph tag to force the new page. In talking
> about this with a colleague, she asked why not set the Pagination to Top
> of
> Page. Hmmm. Good question.
>
> Do you folks have any words of wisdom (pros or cons) for using one method
> over the other for a page break paragraph tag?
>
> Thanks!
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Linda G. Gallagher
> TechCom Plus, LLC
> lindag at techcomplus dot com
> www.techcomplus.com
> 303-450-9076 or 800-500-3144
> User guides, online help, FrameMaker and
> WebWorks ePublisher templates
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Manager, STC Consulting and Independent
> Contracting SIG
> http://www.stcsig.org/cic/index.html
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
>
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