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If you need to do this, you may find it easier to insert the graphic into a text box before doing your positioning. If that is the case, you'll need to change to one of the non-inline graphics options, set the wrapping, and adjust the vertical position manually. The other possible cause is that some graphics cannot, for whatever reason, be positioned as described here. In order to follow the rest of the steps, you'll need to convert it to an inline graphic, as described in other WordTips. First, your graphic may not really be inline. If Word won't display the Font dialog box (step 2), then there are two possible reasons. The value you use will depend on the size of the graphic whose position you are adjusting and the characteristics of the font used in the paragraph. You may need to play with the value entered in the By box (step 5) to get just the look you want.
Enter a value in the By box, to the right of the Position control, that represents the number of points by which you want to lower the graphic.
Using the Position drop-down list, choose Lowered.
The Character Spacing tab of the Font dialog box. (In Word 2010 and Word 2013, Character Spacing is found in the Advanced tab.) (See Figure 1.)įigure 1.
Make sure the Character Spacing tab is displayed.
Select the inline graphic by clicking on it once.
You can change the vertical alignment of an inline graphic by treating it as you would any other single character with a vertical position you'd want to adjust. Word treats inline graphics as a single character. Just within a single page, you may find need to cycle through left, right and center alignment and Word allows you to change text as required. So the solution involves adjusting the vertical positioning of the graphic. Your characters may appear on the page left to right with a ragged-right edge border, but you can change entire pages or single lines to different alignment with a couple of clicks. Next note the use of the alignment tab character & to separate the entries of the matrix and the use of to separate the rows of the matrix, exactly as in the construction of multiline formulae described above. The effect that Robert is noticing is the default behavior for inline graphics, although the cause he cites is backwards-it is actually the graphic that defaults to bottom alignment with the text, not the text with the graphic. then the size of the parentheses is chosen to match the subformula that they enclose. Because InDesign is a type snob (in a good way), it wont allow you to make 'faux' type styles. He wonders if it is possible to change that so the text is either center- or top-aligned with the graphic. This section looks at the basic options available in the Character Formatting Controls on the Control Palette or on the Character Palette. Robert notes that when he places an inline graphic in his document that is taller than a single line of text, the text defaults to being aligned with the bottom of the graphic.