Where’d this trend in “round highlighters” come from?
I suspect that a popular app is styling highlighted text this way. Do you know it?
I suspect that a popular app is styling highlighted text this way. Do you know it?
According to this answer to another question about small caps by @yakunins, Arial got small caps around 2014:
In some (old, fiction) books, each chapter begins with a few sentences that summarize, or rather hint at, the developements in the chapter. For example, the first chapter of “Three Men in a Boat”, by Jerome K Jerome (Project Gutenberg edition) commences thusly:
Which Unicode symbol that normally looks like two lines crossed together properly represents multiplication and what do the other Unicode characters that look like it mean?
Hello, here is my issue:
I have a few questions about my page layout.
I’m typesetting a book which includes a map. I rotated the map 90 degrees to fit it better to the page. Should the bottom of the map be on the spine side or the edge side of the page?
I’m typesetting a book which contains full page illustrations. Sometimes the illustrations fall in between the end of one chapter and the start of another:
I’m not asking when to underline. There are myriad references for that via a simple internet search. However, this one doesn’t seem to appear anywhere…
Is it possible to have two text frames with different justifications, which are linked to allow the text to flow between them?