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Caveat: Googling the discussion title yields many results, but does not interpret what I'm asking, the way I intend. I've tried to clarify the problem in question by attaching two screen shots to this post, please refer to these if needed.
Question: Is there a way to make words or characters (glyphs) wrap to a text frame's edge when hyphenation is turned off?
Screen Shot 1: shows filling a text frame without any space characters, with hyphenation turned on. Here InDesign makes the decision of where to hyphenate a line.
Screen Shot 2: the same text frame as SS1 with hyphenation turned off. Here InDesign will consider any lines that do not fit as overset text, showing the overset text icon in the bottom right of the text frame.
Hi Josh,
I see a way of doing this:
1. Set the language formatting of the text to "No Language"
2. Turn hyphenation off
Hope, that helps.
Uwe
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With no spaces between words, and no hyphens, what would expect to happen?
InDesign has no way to break the text at the end of each line, so the text just overflows the frame.
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@Jeff what I was hoping to do is make the characters fill the frame (like justification) and break the line at the point which it could no longer fit.
I understand there may not be a way to do this as it's a unique situation (testing kerning for type design project) and normally this wouldn't be useful for most people.
However, another situation I encountered with my students this week in our typesetting class was when this happened using words in a narrow column, and of course the text disappears and they are greatly confused as to what happened. I raised the question to this scenario as it seems InDesign could be improved in how it delivers use feedback in the error process, which would be especially helpful for people new to learning the program.
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Hi Josh,
I see a way of doing this:
1. Set the language formatting of the text to "No Language"
2. Turn hyphenation off
Hope, that helps.
Uwe
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Great answer Uwe!
Actually, your answer works even if you don't turn hyphens off. I guess because without a Language, there are no hyphens.
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Brilliant!
Thanks Laubender for interpreting my question as a real problem, and that I had an intention.
It's a weird situation but this will be incredibly helpful for proofing my kerning pairs
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Hi Josh,
if that would not help I have another suggestion:
Indiscripts :: ‘Ultrafluid’ Line Wrap in InDesign
Regards,
Uwe