A paragraph is a unit of text or other content that starts at the beginning of a document, immediately after a hard return (a carriage return), a page break, or a section break, or at the beginning of a table cell, header, footer, or list of footnotes and ends with a hard return (carriage return) or at the end of a table cell. Word documents generally contain paragraphs with different formatting. Even a very simple document with a centered heading and a justified body contains paragraphs with two different types of formatting. Word's graphical user interface (GUI) provides ways to apply numerous formatting options to your paragraphs. However, these options are not available in a single location, and some of these locations differ in different versions of Word. For this reason, this page is divided into the following sections, and the applicable options are described in each section. Many options are available directly in the Paragraph group on the Home tab of the Ribbon, in the Paragraph group on the Page Layout tab, and on the contextual toolbar and menu that appear when you right-click within text. Alignment or justification refers to the way in which the lines of a paragraph are aligned. There are four types of alignment, and the type of alignment of the paragraph where your cursor is located is indicated by the highlighted button in the Paragraph group on the Home tab.
You can change the type of alignment of the paragraph where your cursor is located or of a group of selected paragraphs by clicking the applicable button in the Paragraph group on the Home tab. There are also shortcut keys (see the table in Keyboard Shortcuts below) for setting the type of alignment. Note. When you apply justified alignment to a paragraph, the last line does not extend across the full width of the text area. You can make all the lines in a paragraph extend across the full width of the text area by placing your cursor within the paragraph and pressing Ctrl+Shift+J, but it should be mentioned that in this case Word also adds space between letters within words to extend the lines. Line spacing refers to the vertical distance between the lines within a paragraph and determines the location of each line relative to the line above it. Line spacing can be specified by name (single, 1.5 lines, double), by a number that indicates a multiple of single spacing (for example, 2.0 is equivalent to double spacing), and by an exact distance in points, where a point (pt) is equal to 1/72 of an inch. You can quickly view and change the line spacing to several common standard values by clicking the Line Spacing button ( ) in the Paragraph group on the Home tab. More line spacing options become available when you click Line Spacing Options to open the Paragraph dialog box (see below).The indent before text refers to the width of the additional empty space that is inserted between the margin and the text on the left-hand side of a paragraph of left-to-right text, and the indent after text refers to the width of the additional empty space that is inserted between the text and the margin on the right-hand side of a paragraph of left-to-right text. You can quickly increase the indent before text to the next tab stop by clicking the Increase Indent button ( ) in the Paragraph group on the Home tab, and you can quickly decrease the indent before text to the preceding tab stop by clicking the Decrease Indent button () in the Paragraph group on the Home tab.You can set the indent before text (the left indent for left-to-right text) to values that do not correspond to tab stops, and you can also set the indent after text (the right indent for left-to-right text) in the Paragraph group on the Page Layout tab. The spacing between your paragraphs is determined by the spacing before it and the spacing after it that are set for each paragraph. You can modify the spacing before a paragraph and the spacing after it by changing the values in the applicable boxes in the Paragraph group on the Page Layout tab. Note. When the first of two consecutive paragraphs has non-zero spacing after it and the second paragraph has non-zero spacing before it, only the larger of the two spaces will be inserted between the paragraphs. If you want to add borders around the paragraph where your cursor is located, click the Borders button () to add the current default borders (the original default or the last border style that you selected). If you want to select a border style that differs from the current default border style, click the small arrow on the Borders button, and select one of the border styles displayed or click Borders and Shading to define your own custom borders. If you want to add borders around multiple paragraphs, select the applicable paragraphs before you click the Borders button or the small arrow on it. If you want to add shading with the current default background color to the entire text area of the paragraph where your cursor is located, click the Shading button ( ) in the Paragraph group on the Home tab. If you want to select a background color other than the current default color, click the small arrow on the Shading button and then click one of the colors displayed or define your own custom color. If you want to apply the same shading to multiple paragraphs, select the applicable paragraphs before you click the Shading button or the small arrow on it.If you choose a very dark background color, Word will automatically change the text color to white to maintain good contrast and keep your text visible. Many of the paragraph formatting options described in the previous sections and additional paragraph formatting options are available in the Paragraph dialog box, which has two tabs.
Before opening the Paragraph dialog box, place your cursor anywhere within a single paragraph that you want to format or select the multiple paragraphs that you want to format. To open the Paragraph dialog box, on the Home tab or on the Page Layout tab, at the bottom of the Paragraph group, click the Paragraph dialog box launcher ( ).When you click OK in the Paragraph dialog box or press Enter, any changes that you have made on either tab will be applied to the single paragraph where you cursor was located or to the paragraphs that you selected. The paragraph formatting options that are available on the Indents and Spacing tab of the Paragraph dialog box are divided among the General, Indentation, and Spacing groups. These paragraph formatting options are described in the next subsections. Alignment or justification refers to the way in which the lines of a paragraph are aligned. There are four types of alignment, namely, left, center, right, and justified, and they have been described above in detail in The Paragraph Group. The value in the Before text box specifies the width of the additional empty space that is inserted between the margin and the text on the left-hand side of a paragraph of left-to-right text, and the value in the After text box specifies the width of the additional empty space that is inserted between the text and the margin on the right-hand side of a paragraph of left-to-right text. A negative value specifies the distance by which the text extends beyond the respective margin. Two types of special indentation can be specified in the Special box.
The spacing between two paragraphs is determined by the spacing before one paragraph and the spacing after the preceding paragraph, which are displayed and can be modified in the Before and After boxes. Note. When the first of two consecutive paragraphs has non-zero spacing after it and the second paragraph has non-zero spacing before it, only the larger of the two spaces will be inserted between the paragraphs. Line spacing refers to the vertical distance between the lines within a paragraph and determines the location of each line relative to the line above it. The following types of line spacing can be specified in the Line spacing box.
The paragraph formatting options that you can configure on the Line and Page Breaks tab of the Paragraph dialog box can help you control where automatic page breaks occur in your document. These paragraph formatting options include the following.
Tab stops are used to horizontally align portions of text or other content on one or more lines when the portions of text or other content in each line are separated by tab characters. When you set a tab stop, you can configure it to align text to the left of the tab stop position, to align text to the right of it, to center text at it, to align the decimal point in the text at it, or to add a solid vertical line or bar at the tab stop in front of the aligned text. In addition, a leader in the form of a dotted line, a dashed line, or a solid line that extends from the text at the previous tab stop to the text aligned at a tab stop can be configured. If you do not set any tab stops in a paragraph either directly or by applying a style to it, Word creates default tab stops every 0.5" (1.27 cm) across the entire width of the text area. The tab stops that are configured in a paragraph apply to all the lines in the paragraph. The Tabs dialog box can be used to set tab stops for one or more paragraphs. Before opening the Tabs dialog box, place your cursor anywhere within a single paragraph for which you want to set tab stops or select the multiple paragraphs for which you want to create tab stops. Then open the Tabs dialog box as follows.
If you want to modify the tab stops that appear in the Tabs dialog box for the single paragraph or multiple paragraphs that you selected, perform the following steps.
The keyboard shortcuts (or shortcut keys or shortcut key combinations) that you can use to quickly apply paragraph formatting are listed in the following table. Keyboard shortcuts for use in paragraph formatting
For more information about line spacing, see Change the Default Line Spacing and Change the Line Spacing. For more information about adjusting paragraph indents, see Adjust Indents and Spacing. For more information about tabs, see the Microsoft help topic Set Tab Stops or Clear Them (for Word 2010) or Set, Edit, or Clear Tabs in Word 2007. |