Skip to main content
Participating Frequently
June 3, 2009
Question

Justify text in Illustrator---again

  • June 3, 2009
  • 3 replies
  • 43819 views

I've read much about justifying text on this forum but have not found an answer to my problem. In CS3 Illustrator I have justified text boxes brought over from Freehand which in Illustrator have lines which are not justified (with no soft line breaks). I have new boxes created the way suggested in this forum (with what I hope is paragraph rather than point text) but the result is the same in all caes. There appears to be no way in Illustrator to make justify text within a text box; no matter what justify option I chose from the Text dialogue box, nothing changes in the non-justified lines. This is the case if I create text from scratch (as per suggested in this forum) or copy and paste a text, the same non-justified lines appear in the same places.

Is CS3 Illustrator simply incapable of doing what it claims in its Text dialogue box? If so, why, since this is a basic necessity?

    This topic has been closed for replies.

    3 replies

    Participant
    August 23, 2013

    I have not seen anyone mention it, but in ID6 it is an option.  I have attached a screenshot.  The only stupid thing is I had to click on the word "Paragraph"

    http://www.fstophangout.com/proof/h669547D0#h669547d0

    Participant
    February 2, 2012

    I came across this problem as well - but there is a very simple way to achieve justify in Illustrator.

    The documentation is here: -

    http://help.adobe.com/en_US/illustrator/cs/using/WS714a382cdf7d304e7e07d0100196cbc5f-6400a.html

    Basically you need to drag out a Bounding Box using the Text Tool BEFORE you enter the text. The text can be pasted or typed, but it must be placed within a BOUNDING BOX.

    Inspiring
    June 3, 2009

    Like so:

    http://mysite.verizon.net/wzphoto/Text.mov

    _scott__
    Legend
    June 3, 2009

    Illustrator CS3 and CS4 have a bug. Soft returns will break justification. The workaround is to use tabs, spacing, or hard returns when possible. A combination of hard returns and full line justification usually does the trick until the bug is fixed.

    _scott__
    Legend
    May 19, 2012

    actually using "paragraph" doesn't justify correctly, and that is the problem.


    This is a 2 year old thread.

    The issue is still present in CS6. Hopefully it will finally be fixed in the future.