Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I cannot delete the top empty row from my column:
I tried double carriage return replacement:
It did not help.
There are no hidden characters, i checked.
Here is a video of the issue (if I am allowed to embed Google Drive video):
<iframe src="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NA5XvybURuXHVlD3CEZ8mmcEyIsBpVbJ/preview" width="640" height="480" allow="autoplay"></iframe>
What could be wrong here?
Well yes, there's no point in doing final copy fitting until you have final copy to fit. I was just pointing out how, in the situation you illustrated, it would be fairly easy to get the extra line you need.
With top-aligned text that empty line would be at the end of the column. I don't think that would be considered bad form at the end of a story, but I would leave it up to your aesthetic sensibility to decide if it would be a sin to have an unbalanced column mid-story. Personally, I would try
...Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Is your text frame vertical justification set to Bottom in the Text Frame Options?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
It was set to center, setting it to top fixed the issue.
Reformatting the text in an online tool and removing all line breaks also fixed the issue.
However because my text is set to be aligned to the baseline grid, the upper row shouldn't stay empty, no matter what is the vertical alignment...
I will see if the problem still persist with vertical alignment changed to top.
It worked though.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
It looks like the next column starts a new paragraph (you seem to still be using placeholder text), and you probably have a keep option set to keep at least two lines together at the start of the paragraph, forcing an empty line someplace in that second column unless you fix the text to add one line.
The only way that empty line will not appear at the top of the column is if the vertical alignement is set to top. Align to Baseline grid is not a factor.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
This is a classic case of where editorial intervention of some sort is required to fix the copy fitting, and tracking the spaces in that last graph in column two slightly should add another line without affecting the next page.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
In my previous thread it was recommended to activate the feature to keep the first 2 and second 2 lines together, so I enabled it, ah, that's why I couldn't delete that empty line, good you told me.
How does keeping lines together help justification? I should know that because that's why it was recommended and that's why I enabled it.
I changed my placeholder text to english, I thought you just meant to use english instead of latin.
So you mean that it's better to copy out some text from real english articles instead and use that as placeholder text?
Or you meant that I should only do the justification when I have my real text that i have written?
So with the top alignment I shouldn't anymore encounter this issue?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
It doen't help justification in any way, it just prevents starting or ending a column with a single line from a paragraph, which is commonly considered poor typography (this is known as widow and orphan control). You will commonly see single lines in newspaper columns whre typefitting needs to be quick and dirty, but it's hardly art.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Well yes, there's no point in doing final copy fitting until you have final copy to fit. I was just pointing out how, in the situation you illustrated, it would be fairly easy to get the extra line you need.
With top-aligned text that empty line would be at the end of the column. I don't think that would be considered bad form at the end of a story, but I would leave it up to your aesthetic sensibility to decide if it would be a sin to have an unbalanced column mid-story. Personally, I would try to avoid it, but it might be preferable to balancing that page if it makes things look worse elsewhere. There are ALWAYS tradeoffs in copy fitting.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Okay, i will disable the keep lines together setting.
Half empty line is okay, but full empty line is not okay because it interfers with other elements offsets, it increases it with 1 line - not good. For example if there's an element under with a top offset.
No empty lines.
Thanks.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Personally, I think that's the wrong choice, but there are no laws governing this.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Of course, if you happen to be working for a commercial publication like a magazine they almost certainly will have a style guide which prescribes exactly what is allowed and prohibited...