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SusanSherman
Inspiring
May 13, 2010
Answered

Border on only two sides?

  • May 13, 2010
  • 5 replies
  • 37261 views

I must admit that I am stumped, and frustrated!  In my newsletter, I have created many paragraph, character, and object styles to quickly apply to my text and graphic elements.  However, I am trying to create a style or combination of styles for my "Pull Quotes" and cannot master one feature.

I would like a stroke on the top and bottom only of the text box, leaving the right and left sides with no stroke.  I am at a complete loss as to how to accomplish this.  In Object Styles, I cannot omit the stroke command for the sides.  In Paragraph Styles, I can only select a "rule above" or "rule below" but not both.  I must admit, the answer may be staring me in the face at this point, but I'm too frustrated to see it.  (I really don't want to have to create separate lines and size and place them each time I include a pull quote!)

ALL help will be appreciated!

The Ubiquitous Information:

ID CS4 v. 6.0.5

Win XP Pro sp3 OS

Thanks!

Susan

    This topic has been closed for replies.
    Correct answer andrewl64023976

    Although this is an old post it is still one of the top results on Google so I thought it was worth posting this link to a tutorial...

        InDesign CC tutorial: Formatting cells | lynda.com - YouTube

    Good Luck

    5 replies

    Participant
    August 4, 2021

    Just for the record (here in 2021 · note to the past) — the work·around is to copy·paste a line an the top and bottom of the text field and assign a paragraph style to the line (same way as you would any text). 

     

    If you — in your indesign layout / page — 'always' have a line between different text groups, but not always start with the same paragraph style (but have different paragraph styles at the top and/or bottom depending on the content) the 'line trick' does a nice job. Especiall handy when the text field is defined to adjust it's size to the content.

    andrewl64023976Correct answer
    Participant
    May 24, 2018

    Although this is an old post it is still one of the top results on Google so I thought it was worth posting this link to a tutorial...

        InDesign CC tutorial: Formatting cells | lynda.com - YouTube

    Good Luck

    rob day
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    May 24, 2018

    With the recent CC versions of ID I'm not sure there's a reason to use a table anymore. The new Paragraph Border feature would be easier and can handle multiple paragraph callouts.

    FergyMac
    Inspiring
    May 13, 2010

    Add a paragraph rule above to your paragrah style for the quote and a rule below to your style for the name/title.

    Peter Spier
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    May 13, 2010

    FergyMac wrote:

    Add a paragraph rule above to your paragrah style for the quote and a rule below to your style for the name/title.

    And make the name style the "next style" for the quote style. If you are copy/pasting the text from the body, you can select the two paragraphs and right-click the quote style inthe panel, then select "apply style and next style."

    Mr. Met
    Inspiring
    May 13, 2010

    Or create a nested style.

    BobLevine
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    May 13, 2010

    You select the rule above and rule below separately. It's certainly confusing but it works for both.

    Bob

    Mr. Met
    Inspiring
    May 13, 2010

    Use the rule above/rule below option. C-Opt-J to get the menu.

    SusanSherman
    Inspiring
    May 13, 2010

    Sorry, but as I said in OP, that only allows me to select one or the other, not both - which is what I need.

    Community Expert
    May 13, 2010

    It certainly works and you can do really nice things

    http://www.theindesigner.com/blog/episode-49-paragraph-rules-rule