2015-11-24 12:00 AM - last edited on 2023-05-19 03:54 PM by Gordana Radonic
2015-11-24 03:02 AM
2015-11-24 03:15 AM
2015-11-24 02:30 PM
2015-11-25 02:39 AM
2015-11-25 07:39 AM
2015-11-25 02:45 PM
Barry wrote:The justification is only for full lines of text (no carriage return). This makes sense, for example, what if the last line was just the word "cut"? The "c" would be on the left, the "u" in the middle, and the "t" on the right, rendering the word unreadable. A word processing application, like Word, works the same way.
But I see the first line is not justified because of the carriage return and the last line is not justified either.
This seems like a bug to me as I can't think why these should not be justified the same as the rest of the text.
2015-11-26 02:59 AM
David wrote:Understandable for a single word but what if there are multiple words.
what if the last line was just the word "cut"? The "c" would be on the left, the "u" in the middle, and the "t" on the right, rendering the word unreadable.
2015-11-26 02:11 PM
Barry wrote:That is not the common solution for the last line, normally only full lines of text are justified. Look at any newspaper column, contract documents or how Microsoft Word handles justified text. In this Wiki article it states that "justify is equal to left justify" unless the application has other options, which is rare.
Certainly on the last line in my example shouldn't that be justified - there is no carriage return there.