Yes, I know that I keep asking ... but I don't get an answer. How do I get a highlight with the function of Newline Before And After in another palette?
EDIT: solution below in the thread made this post besides the point.
I was able to create these in the past, specifically Libronix days,by entering the command ^n in the before or after text portion of the dialog. From memory this initially ported over to Logos 4 fine, but at some point, not sure where now this method broke and stopped working. I too wish they would fix this up.
How do I get a highlight with the function of Newline Before And After in another palette?
Duplicate the "EMPHASIS MARKUP" palette
The "duplicated" palette allows styles to be duplicated, moved, ...
Keep Smiling [:)]
The saying goes that all roads lead to Rome. This is not true of Logos when it comes to wanting to do something specific, but as your ingenious solution demonstrates there often is at least one (generally unmarked) road that leads to Rome!
I think you may have succeeded in keeping MJ smiling!
Though the Edit function is available in the duplicated palette, I did not see any way to edit the built-in part of the style. I am curious then as to whether your image above that has "Newline Before" as a new name indicates that you found a way to remove the line after part of the style (and thus edit the built-in aspect of the style) or whether it's just a quick rename.
I am curious then as to whether your image above that has "Newline Before" as a new name indicates that you found a way to remove the line after part of the style (and thus edit the built-in aspect of the style) or whether it's just a quick rename.
Style "Newline Before And After" has Text Before and Text After:
Style "Newline Before" has Text After deleted (so "Label text" appears) plus an image inserted:
Thank you ... I am one happy camper
Style "Newline Before" has Text After deleted (so "Label text" appears)
Fascinating that something's hiding in the white space. I wonder if there is any way of exposing what it is. Since it is erasable, it seems like it could be a character. If we can find out what hides in the white boxes, we might be able to use this knowledge (characters?) to enhance our own styles.