ID: Q118637
The information in this article applies to:
The ADVANCE field may cause "advanced text" to (1) appear lowered rather than raised, or (2) disappear from view.
For the following examples, assume an ADVANCE field can be found after "Have" in the sentence "Have a nice day." For example,
line 5
line 6 Have {ADVANCE \u 72} a nice day.
In the example above, the ADVANCE field would advance "a nice day." one
inch or 72 points up the page from the text "Have." For example,
a nice day.
line 6 Have
LOWERED: If the line spacing is set to Single, the upward motion of the advanced text actually increases the line's overall spacing. Therefore, the text before the ADVANCE field appears to have been lowered, and the text after the ADVANCE field appears to have remained where it was originally positioned. For example, see "Have a nice day." on line 6. The text "Have" appears to have been lowered when actually the line spacing has increased and the text adjusts to consume its full height. Hence, "Have" is sitting on the bottom of the line space and "a nice day" has risen to the top of the line space.
a nice day.
line 6 Have
DISAPPEARS: If line spacing is set to Exactly, the advanced text is
positioned beyond the given amount of line spacing and will disappear from
view. It will not display correctly in print preview, page layout view, but
it will print correctly. For example:
<the text "a nice day" does not
line 2 display as the ADVANCE field
line 3 pushes it up to line 1 It
line 4 disappears from view as it goes
line 5 beyond line 6's line space;
line 6 Have however, it will print.>
This behavior is by design. ADVANCE fields allow for better conversion of WordPerfect documents. They are not necessarily the best method to position text in Word.
Method 1: Format lines that include an ADVANCE field with Exactly line
spacing. (To do this, choose Paragraph from the Format menu,
choose the Indents And Spacing tab. In the Line Spacing box
choose Exactly, use the default point size shown and choose the
OK button.)
Again, the text may disappear from view as the advanced text
moves beyond a line's given amount of line spacing, but it will
print. The line following the Advance field may appear clipped on
the display but will print fine as long as its final position is
within the margins.
Method 2: Frame text and position the frame on the page, rather than using
an ADVANCE field.
ADVANCE switches (\D, \U, \L, and \R) are relative pen movements WITHIN a line of text. For example, {ADVANCE \U 72} in the middle of a line will position text after the ADVANCE field 1 inch above the text, left of the ADVANCE field. The effect is similar to formatting all the characters after the ADVANCE field as "raised by 72 pt."
To raise or lower text in Word:
1. From the Format menu, choose Font.
2. Select the Character Spacing tab.
3. In the Position box, select Raised or Lowered.
4. In the By box, specify in points the amount you want to raise or lower
text, and choose the OK button.
With use of its new ADVANCE field format, Word 6.0 now successfully
converts the majority of the cases where Advance codes are used in
WordPerfect documents. WordPerfect up, down, to-line, left, and right
Advance formats and horizontal/vertical combinations thereof are mapped to
equivalent Word 6.0 ADVANCE \U, \D, \L, \R, \X, and \Y formats, and vice
versa.
Word 6.0 for Windows is the first version of Word to support Advance formatting of WordPerfect 5.1 for MS-DOS and versions 5.1 and 5.2 for Windows. Advance formatting is not a feature of earlier versions of Word where Advance codes are ignored during conversion..
For additional information, query on the following words in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Advance and WordPerfect
KBCategory: kbusage
KBSubcategory: kbfield
Additional query words: 6.0 6.0a WordPerfect word perfect advance
6.0c 7.0 word95 word7 word6 winword word97
Keywords : kbualink97 kbfield
Version : 6.0 6.0a 6.0c 7.0 97
Platform : WINDOWS
Last Reviewed: February 6, 1998