Many other text editors automatically convert each file you open to Unicode, and convert it back to the legacy encoding when saving. This reduces performance with large files. If the wrong encoding is used by the editor, or if the file had invalid characters, data corruption will occur.
EditPad Pro handles DOS/Windows, UNIX/Linux and Macintosh line breaks. Open and save text files encoded in Unicode (UTF-8, UTF-16 and UTF-32), any Windows code page, any ISO-8859 code page, and a variety of DOS, Mac, EUC, EBCDIC, and other legacy code pages. Convert files between any of these encodings.
You can use any keyboard layout and any IME (input method editor) for any language or script that Windows provides in the Regional Settings in the Control Panel. That includes right-to-left scripts such as Hebrew or Arabic and complex scripts such as the Indic scripts. If you set the default encoding in EditPad to Unicode, you can use all languages and scripts at the same time in a single file.
EUC stands for Extended UNIX Code. These encodings were common on UNIX platform for encoding text in Far East languages that use up to two bytes per character. EditPad Pro supports the EUC code pages that were commonly used prior to Unicode.
The EBCDIC encodings were the de facto standard when computer files were saved on punch cards, and are still used by mainframe systems from IBM and other vendors. EditPad Pro supports the more commonly used EBCDIC encodings.
EditPad can convert text from and to several other encodings. These encodings cannot be edited directly because they use partial bytes to encode characters (UTF-7), use a state mechanism that requires the entire file to be processed (ISO-2022 and HZ), or use a single byte to represent multiple Unicode characters (TSCII). If you edit a file using one of these encodings, EditPad Pro will convert it to Unicode when reading the file and convert it back into the legacy encoding when saving the file.
Note: To increase or decrease the value, clickin the Baseline Shift box, and then press the Up or Down Arrow key.Hold down Shift while you press the Up or Down Arrow key to changethe value in greater increments.
Thevalues applied are percentages of the current font size and leading,and are based on settings in the Type Preferences dialog box. Thesevalues do not appear in the Baseline Shift or Size boxes of theCharacter panel when you select the text.
Note: To change the underline or strikethroughoptions in a paragraph or character style, use the Underline Optionsor Strikethrough Options section of the dialog box that appearswhen you create or edit the style.
With OpenType fonts, when you choose Ligatures from the Character panel menu, Control panel menu, or in-context menu, InCopy produces any standard ligature defined in the font, as determined by the font designer. However, some fonts include more ornate, optional ligatures, which can be produced when you choose the Discretionary Ligatures command.
Youcan apply colors, gradients, and strokes to characters and continueto edit the text. Use the Swatches panel and Stroke panel to applycolors, gradients, and strokes to text, or change Character Colorsettings when creating or editing a style.
To apply color changes to all text in a frame, usethe Selection tool toselect the frame. When applying color to the text rather than thecontainer, make sure that you select the Formatting Affects Texticon inthe Tools panel or in the Swatches panel.
Youcan apply colors and gradients to the stroke and fill of characterswith the Swatches panel. For a linked story, you can apply any colorsor gradients defined by the linked InDesign layout. For a stand-alonestory, you can apply any of the default colors or new colors youcreate for the document.
InDesign uses Proximity (and WinSoft for some languages)dictionaries for both spelling and hyphenation. These dictionarieslet you specify a different language for as little as a single characterof text. Each dictionary contains hundreds of thousands of wordswith standard syllable breaks. Changing the default language doesnot affect existing text frames or documents.
InDesigncan automatically change the case of selected text. Whenyou format text as small caps, InDesign automatically uses the small-cap charactersdesigned as part of the font, if available. Otherwise, InDesign synthesizes thesmall caps using scaled-down versions of the regular capital letters.The size of synthesized small caps is set in the Type Preferencesdialog box.
Note: The Sentence Case command assumes that the period (.),exclamation point (!), and question mark (?) charactersmark the ends of sentences. Applying Sentence Case may cause unexpectedcase changes when these characters are used in other ways, as inabbreviations, file names, or Internet URLs. In addition, proper namesmay become lowercase when they should be uppercase.
Youcan specify the proportion between the height and width of the type, relativeto the original width and height of the characters. Unscaled characters havea value of 100%. Some type families include a true expandedfont, which is designed with a larger horizontal spread thanthe plain type style. Scaling distorts the type, soit is generally preferable to use a font that is designed as condensed orexpanded, if one is available.
Ifthe Use New Vertical Scaling in Vertical preference option is selected,the X and Y scale for Roman glyphs in vertical text will be reversed,making all text in the line scale in the same direction. (See ChangeCJK composition preferences.) If the Adjust Line Height WithChar Scale option is selected in the Character panel menu, the Yscale of glyphs affects line height. When scaling frame grids, theY scale is affected, so you may want to adjust the line height toavoid auto-gyoudori occurring on the scaled grid.
When you change the scale of a frame, thetext inside the frame is also scaled. For example, when you doublethe size of a text frame, the text also doubles in size; 20-pointtext increases to 40 points.
The scaling values in the Transform panel tell you the horizontaland vertical percentage by which the frame was scaled. By default,with Apply To Content selected, scaling values display at 100% aftera text is scaled. If you select the Adjust Scaling Percentage option,the scaling values reflect the scaled frame, so doubling the scaleof a frame displays as 200%.
The Adjust Scaling Percentage preference stays with the text.The scaled point size continues to appear in parentheses even ifyou turn off the Adjust Scaling Percentage preference and scalethe frame again.
If you edit the text or scale a frame within threaded frameswhen the Adjust Scaling Percentage preference is selected, the textis scaled, even if it moves to a different frame. However, if ApplyTo Content is selected, any text that flows to a different frameas a result of editing is no longer scaled.
These guidelines explain how to make Web content accessible to people withdisabilities. The guidelines are intended for all Web contentdevelopers (page authors and site designers) and fordevelopers of authoring tools. The primary goal ofthese guidelines is to promote accessibility. However, following themwill also make Web content more available to all users, whateveruser agentthey are using (e.g., desktopbrowser, voice browser, mobile phone, automobile-basedpersonal computer, etc.) orconstraints they may be operating under (e.g., noisysurroundings, under- or over-illuminated rooms, in a hands-freeenvironment, etc.). Following these guidelines will also help peoplefind information on the Web more quickly. These guidelines do notdiscourage content developers from using images, video, etc., butrather explain how to make multimedia content more accessible to a wideaudience.This is a reference document for accessibility principles anddesign ideas. Some of the strategies discussed in this documentaddress certain Web internationalization and mobile accessconcerns. However, this document focuses on accessibility and does notfully address the related concerns of otherW3C Activities. Pleaseconsult the W3C Mobile AccessActivity home page and theW3C InternationalizationActivity home page for more information.This document is meant to be stable and therefore does not providespecific information about browser support for different technologiesas that information changes rapidly. Instead, the Web Accessibility Initiative(WAI) Website provides such information (refer to [WAI-UA-SUPPORT]).This document includes an appendix that organizes all of the checkpoints by topic and priority.The checkpoints in the appendix link to their definitions in thecurrent document. The topics identified in the appendix includeimages, multimedia, tables, frames, forms, and scripts. The appendixis available as either atabular summary of checkpoints or as a simple list of checkpoints.A separate document, entitled "Techniques for Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0" ([TECHNIQUES]), explains how to implementthe checkpoints defined in the current document. The TechniquesDocument discusses each checkpoint in more detail and providesexamples using theHypertext Markup Language (HTML),Cascading Style Sheets (CSS),Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language(SMIL),and the Mathematical Markup Language (MathML). The Techniques Document also includestechniques for document validation and testing, andan index of HTML elements and attributes (and which techniquesuse them). The Techniques Document has been designed totrack changes in technology and is expected to be updatedmore frequently than the current document.Note. Not all browsers or multimedia tools maysupport the features described in the guidelines. In particular, newfeatures of HTML 4.0 or CSS 1 or CSS 2 may not be supported.
"Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0" is part of a series of accessibility guidelinespublished by the Web AccessibilityInitiative. The series also includes User Agent AccessibilityGuidelines ([WAI-USERAGENT]) andAuthoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines ([WAI-AUTOOLS]). Status of this documentThis specification is a Superseded Recommendation. A newer specification exists that is recommended for new adoption in place of this specification.
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