Clipped Ascending, Descending Characters in Word for Windows
ID: Q65844
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The information in this article applies to:
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Microsoft Word for Windows, versions 1.0, 1.1, 1.1a, 2.0, 2.0a, 2.0a-CD, 2.0b, 2.0c, 6.0, 6.0a, 6.0c
SUMMARY
Occasionally, the tops and bottoms of ascending or descending
characters in Microsoft Word for Windows may be clipped. This refers
to the screen only; the characters print correctly.
This is by design. Word for Windows paints the screen line by line.
Before a line is written, the screen is blanked out all the way across
the display rectangle. If text in the previous line is subscripted
text, Word paints over the bits that hang down into the next line with
white. The same thing happens with superscripts text, and with some
fonts that are designed so that the descenders actually go below the
baseline. This is done for stylistic reasons; however, the result is
that Word clips the bottom pixels of g's and y's at some point sizes.
This is font independent, the only difference would be that some fonts
have ascenders or descenders that are not as pronounced and
consequently are not clipped as badly.
Additional query words:
winword winppt macppt word6 1.0 1.1 1.x cut off 2.0 6.0 winword2 4.0 4.0a table insert powerpoint
Keywords :
Version : WINDOWS:1.0,1.1,1.1a,2.0,2.0a,2.0a-CD,2.0b,2.0c,6.0,6.0a,6.0c
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type :
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