



Press the Apply button and then Change the font size to be a little bit smaller, for example 12pt to 10pt.Press the Edit > button to edit the style.Remember that the paragraph style is "based on" the character style so changes to the character style will be automatically applied to the paragraph style, and then to any text that has had that style applied. Without the baseline grid you would have to move the text frames up and down until you got them lined up - as you did earlier - and that's a real pain.
Scribus snap to grid manual#
When you're using the baseline grid, Scribus is doing all of the work to make sure that the text is aligned across text frames without you needing to do any manual adjustments. If there isn't enough space to draw that line of text - if the characters are too high - Scribus will jump down to the next baseline and start drawing the text there. This is because - when you are using the baseline grid - Scribus tries to draw the text along the first baseline that is behind the text frame. You will have noticed that as you moved the text frame up the text stayed where it was until you reached a certain point when it jumped up to the baseline above. Keep pressing UP until you see the text jump up. Use your keyboard cursor UP key to move the position of the text frame up.So its got the text aligned, what's so clever about that? Well, try this… In other words, their bases are on the baselines. The bottom of the characters are sitting on the lines of the baseline grid. You can now see that the lines of text in the left-hand text frame are now at the same vertical positions as the lines of text in the other text frame, see figure 5. Scroll as needed so that you are looking at the centre of the page again.Choose View → 200% to zoom into the page again.Now you need to apply your new styles to your text. You can either press the << Done button to make the dialog smaller or close the dialog altogether, that's up to you. You can now see your new paragraph style in the list on the left (under Paragraph Styles). Press the Apply button at the bottom of the dialog.Choose Align to Baseline Grid from the drop-down menu.It's probably called "Fixed Linespacing" at the moment. Press the first button under "Distances and Alignment".Underneath the name field, click the "Properties" tab.Any changes to the "Body" character style will automatically be applied to any text using the "Body" paragraph style. You have now told the "Body" paragraph style to use the "Body" character style. Press the Based On drop-down button and choose "Body" from the list.Here you will connect the character style you created earlier to this paragraph style. Underneath the name field, click the "Character Style" tab.If you give a character style and paragraph style the same name it will help you to remember they're connected. But fear not citizen, it's Baseline Grid to the rescue! This is a very time-consuming process which, if you had to do the same on many pages with multiple text frames on each, you'd soon become very frustrated with. Try to get the bottoms of the lines of text aligned at the same height on the page between the two text frames.Select the bottom-right text frame and use your keyboard UP and DOWN keys to move the frame.(Try different zoom levels - menu View - to look at the text at different magnifications.) But you can fix it. The characters on the left - on the blue dotted line - don't line-up with the characters on the right - on the purple line. Unless you've been very lucky when drawing your frames, if you look at the lines of text in the left-hand frame and compare them to the lines of text in the other text frame you'll notice that the bottoms of the characters are at different heights on the page, see figure 3. Scroll as needed so that you are looking at the centre of the page.Choose View → 200% to zoom in to the page.
