The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMS
A dropped capital letter ("drop cap") can cause problems with envelope
addressing or table of contents creation.
WORKAROUNDThe two most common problems associated with drop caps concern envelope addressing and table of contents creation. Envelope AddressingWhen you create envelopes, Word searches in the current document for a possible mailing address. If you have formatted a drop cap at the beginning of the mailing address in your document, Word does not correctly choose the entire mailing address for the Envelope dialog box. If you do not select anything, Word "guesses" the address minus the first letter (the one with drop cap formatting).The easiest workaround for this situation is to accept the guess that Word makes and then type the appropriate first letter. If you select the drop cap and the rest of the address, Word chooses just the letter with the drop cap formatting as the mailing address. Tables of ContentsA common way to create a table of contents (TOC) is to build it from styles. If your drop cap paragraph is formatted with a heading style and you create a TOC based on heading styles, the drop cap letter appears by itself as a TOC entry, and the rest of the original paragraph appears as a second TOC entry.To work around this problem, use Table of Contents Entry (TC) fields to mark the TOC entries instead of using the heading styles. MORE INFORMATIONWord includes the Drop Cap command on the Format menu to allow easy creation of a dropped capital letter ("drop cap") at the beginning of a sentence. When you use this feature, Word inserts a new framed paragraph in the document. Because the drop cap is in a separate paragraph, it behaves as a separate paragraph and may cause unwanted behavior in some situations. Additional query words:
Keywords : kbdta word97 |
Last Reviewed: November 19, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |