Chapter 1: Desktop Publishing with Pages
In This Chapter
Creating a Pages document
Entering and editing text
Formatting text
Inserting tables and graphics
Resizing objects
Checking your spelling
Printing Pages documents
Sharing your work
What’s the difference between word processing and desktop publishing? In a nutshell, it’s in how you design your document. Most folks use a word processor like an old-fashioned typewriter. Think Microsoft Word and a typical business letter. (Yawn.)
On the other hand, a desktop publishing application typically allows you far more creativity in choosing where you place your text, how you align graphics, and how you edit formats. I think desktop publishing is more visual and intuitive, allowing your imagination a free hand at creating a document.
In this chapter, I show you how to set your inner designer free from the tedious constraints of word processing! Whether you need a simple letter, a stunning brochure, or a multipage newsletter, Pages ’09 can handle the job with ease — and you’ll be surprised at how simple it is to use.
Creating a New Pages Document
Every visual masterpiece starts somewhere, and with Pages, the first stop in creating your document is the Template Chooser window. To create a new Pages document from scratch, follow these steps:
1. Double-click your hard drive icon and click the Applications entry in the Finder window sidebar. Double-click the iWork folder to open it.
The iWork installation program offers to add a Pages icon to your
Dock. If you’ll be using Pages often, it’s a good idea to use this
option!
2. Double-click the Pages icon.
Pages displays the Template Chooser window that you see in Figure 1-1.
3. Click the type of document you want to create in the list to the left. The thumbnails on the right are updated with templates that match your choice.
4. Click the template that most closely matches your needs.
5. Click Choose to open a new document by using the template you selected.
Figure 1-1: Selecting a template from the Template Chooser window.
Open an Existing Pages Document
Of course, you can always open a Pages document from a Finder window — just double-click the document icon. However, you can also open a Pages document from within the program. Follow these steps:
1. Double-click the Pages icon to run the program.
2. Press Ô+O to display the Open dialog.
The Open dialog operates much the same as a Finder window in icon, list, or column view mode.
3. Click the desired drive in the Devices list at the left of the dialog and then click folders and subfolders until you’ve located the Pages document.
4. Double-click the filename to load it.
Saving Your Work
To save a Pages document after you finish it (or to take a break while designing), follow these steps:
1. Press Ô+S.
If you’re saving a document that hasn’t yet been saved, the familiar Save As sheet appears.
2. Type a filename for your new document.
3. Click the Where pop-up menu and choose a location to save the document.
Alternatively, click the button sporting the down arrow to expand the Save As sheet. This allows you to navigate to a different location, or to create a new folder to store this Pages project.
4. Click Save.
Touring the Pages Window
Before we dive into any real work, let me show you around the Pages window! You’ll find the following major components and controls, as shown in Figure 1-2:
♦ Pages list: This thumbnail list displays all the pages you’ve created within your document. (For a single-page document, of course, the Page list will contain only a single thumbnail.) You can switch instantly between different pages in your document by clicking the desired thumbnail in the list.
♦ Layout pane: This section takes up most of the Pages window — it’s where you design and edit each page in your document.
♦ Toolbar: Yep, Pages has its own toolbar. The toolbar keeps all the most common application controls within easy, one-click reach.
♦ Styles Drawer: This window extension allows you to quickly switch the appearance of selected paragraphs, characters, and lists. You can hide and display the Styles Drawer from the View menu or from the View drop-down menu on the toolbar.
♦ Format Bar: This button strip runs underneath the Pages toolbar, allowing you to format selected text, paragraphs, and lists on the fly.
Figure 1-2: The major points of interest in the Pages window.
Entering and Editing Text
If you’ve used a modern word processing program on any computer — including “freebies” such as TextEdit on a Mac or WordPad on a PC — you’ll feel right at home typing within Pages. Just in case, however, let’s review the high points:
♦ The bar-shaped text cursor, which looks like a capital letter I, indicates where the text you enter will appear within a Pages document.
♦ To enter text, simply begin typing. Your characters appear at the text cursor.
♦ To edit existing text in your Pages document, click the insertion cursor at any point in the text and drag the insertion cursor across the characters to highlight them. Type the replacement text, and Pages automatically replaces the existing characters with the ones you type.
♦ To delete text, click and drag across the characters to highlight them; then press Delete.
Using Text and Graphics Boxes
Within Pages, text and graphics appear in boxes, which can be resized by clicking and dragging on one of the handles that appear around the edges of the box. (Hover your mouse cursor over one of the square handles and you’ll see that it changes to a double-sided arrow, indicating that Pages is ready to resize the box.)
You can also move a box, including all the stuff it contains, to another location within the Layout pane. Click in the center of the box and drag the box to the desired spot. Note that Pages displays blue alignment lines to help you align the box with other elements around it (or with regular divisions of the page, such as the vertical center of a poster or flyer). Figure 1-3 illustrates a box containing text that I’m moving; note the vertical alignment line that automatically appears.
Figure 1-3: Moving a text box within the Layout pane.
The Three Amigos: Cut, Copy, and Paste
“Hang on, Mark, you’ve covered moving stuff, but what if you want to copy a block of text or a photo to a second location? Or how about cutting something from a document open in another application?” Good questions, dear reader! That’s when you can call on the power of the cut, copy, and paste features within Pages. The next few sections explain how you do these actions.
Cutting stuff
Cutting selected text or graphics removes it from your Pages document and places that material within your Clipboard. (Think of the Clipboard as a holding area for snippets of text and graphics that you want to manipulate.) To cut text or graphics, select some material and do one of the following:
♦ Choose Edit⇒Cut.
♦ Press Ô+X.
If you simply want to remove the selected material from your Pages document (and you don’t plan to paste it somewhere else), just select the text and press the Delete key.
Copying text and images
When you copy text or graphics, the original selection remains untouched, but a copy of the selection is placed in the Clipboard. Select some text or graphics and do one of the following:
♦ Choose Edit⇒Copy.
♦ Press Ô+C.
Pasting from the Clipboard
Are you wondering what you can do with all that stuff that’s accumulating in your Clipboard? Pasting the contents of the Clipboard places the material at the current location of the insertion cursor. You can repeat a paste operation as often as you like because the contents of the Clipboard aren’t cleared. However, remember that the Clipboard holds only the contents of your last copy or cut operation, so you must paste the contents before you cut or copy again to avoid losing what’s in the Clipboard.
To paste the Clipboard contents, click the insertion cursor at the location you want and do one of the following:
♦ Choose Edit⇒Paste.
♦ Press Ô+V.
Formatting Text the Easy Way
If you feel that some (or all) of the text in your Pages document needs a facelift, you can format that text any way you like. Formatting lets you change the color, font family, character size, and attributes as necessary.
After the text is selected, you can apply basic formatting in two ways:
♦ Use the Format bar. The Format bar appears directly underneath the Pages toolbar, as shown in Figure 8-1. Click to select a font control to display a pop-up menu and then click your choice. For example, click the Font Family button and you can change the font family from Arial to a more daring font. You can also select characteristics such as the font’s background color (perfect for “highlighting” items) or choose italicizing or bolding. The Format Bar also provides buttons for text alignment (Align Left, Center, Align Right, and Justify).
♦ Use the Format menu. Most controls on the Format Bar are also available from the Format menu. Click Format and hover the mouse cursor over the Font menu item, and you can then apply bolding, italicizing, and underlining to the selected text. You can also make the text bigger or smaller. To change the alignment from the Format menu, click Format and hover the mouse cursor over the Text menu item.
Adding a Spiffy Table
In the world of word processing, a table is a grid that holds text or graphics for easy comparison. Many computer owners think of a spreadsheet program like Numbers when they think of a table (probably because of the rows and columns layout used in a spreadsheet), but you can create a custom table layout within Pages with a few simple mouse clicks.
Follow these steps:
1. Click the insertion cursor at the location where you want the table to appear.
2. Click the Table button on the Pages toolbar.
Pages inserts a simple table and displays the Table Inspector. (Both are visible in Figure 1-4.)
Figure 1-4: Preparing to tweak a table in my Pages document.
3. Click within a cell in the table to enter text. The table cell automatically resizes and “wraps” the text you enter to fit.
You can paste material from the Clipboard into a table. See the
earlier section “Pasting from the Clipboard” for details on
pasting.
4. To change the borders on a cell, click the cell to select it and then click one of the Cell Border buttons to change the border.
Select
multiple cells in a table by holding down Shift as you click.
5. To add a background color (or even fill cells with an image for a background), click the Cell Background pop-up menu and choose a type of background.
Adding Alluring Photos
You can choose from two methods of adding a picture within your Pages document: as a floating object, meaning that you can place the image in a particular spot and it doesn’t move, even if you make changes to the text; and as an inline object, which flows with the surrounding text as you make layout changes.
♦ Add a floating object. Drag an image file from a Finder window and place it at the spot you want within your document. Alternatively, you can click the Media button on the toolbar and click Photos, navigate to the location where the file is saved, and drag the image thumbnail to the spot you want in the document. Figure 1-5 illustrates the Media Browser in action.
Note that a floating object (such as a shape or image) can be sent
to the background, where text
will not wrap around it. To bring a background object back as a
regular floating object, click the object to select it and click
Arrange⇒Bring Background Objects to Front. (More about background
objects later in this chapter.)
♦ Add an inline object. Hold down the Ô key as you drag an image file from a Finder window and place it where you want within your document. You can also click the Media toolbar button and click Photos to display the Media Browser. Navigate to the location where the file is saved, hold down the Ô key, and drag the image thumbnail to the spot where you want it in the document.
Figure 1-5:Hey, isn’t that the Pages Media Browser?
Adding a Background Shape
To add a shape (such as a rectangle or circle) as a background for your text, follow these steps:
1. Click the insertion cursor in the location you want.
2. Click the Shapes button on the Pages toolbar and choose a shape.
The shape appears in your document.
3. Click the center of the shape and drag it to a new spot.
As can image boxes, shapes can be resized or moved.
4. Before you can type over a shape, remember to select it and choose Arrange⇒Send Object to Background.
Are You Sure About That Spelling?
Pages can check spelling as you type (the default setting) or check it after you complete your document. If you find automatic spell-checking distracting, you should definitely pick the latter method.
To check spelling as you type, follow these steps:
1. Click Edit and hover the mouse cursor over the Spelling menu item.
2. Click Check Spelling As You Type.
If a possible misspelling is found, Pages underlines the word with a red, dashed line.
3. Right-click the word to choose a possible correct spelling from the list, or you can ignore the word if it’s spelled correctly.
To check spelling manually, follow these steps:
1. Click within the document to place the text insertion cursor where the spell check should begin.
2. Click Edit and hover the mouse cursor over the Spelling menu item; then choose Check Spelling.
3. Right-click any possible misspellings and choose the correct spelling, or choose Ignore if the word is spelled correctly.
Printing Your Pages Documents
Ready to start the presses? You can print your Pages document on real paper, of course, but don’t forget that you can also save a tree by creating an electronic, PDF-format document instead of a printout. (For the lowdown on PDF printing, visit Chapter 4 in Book VII.)
To print your Pages document on old-fashioned paper, follow these steps:
1. Within Pages, click File and choose Print.
Pages displays the Print sheet you see in Figure 1-6.
2. Click in the Copies field and enter the number of copies you need.
3. Select the pages to print.
• To print the entire document, select All.
• To print a range of selected pages, select the From radio button and enter the starting and ending pages.
4. Click the Print button to send the document to your printer.
Figure 1-6: Preparing to print a work of art within Pages.
Sharing That Poster with Others
Besides printing — which is, after all, so passé — you can choose to share your Pages document electronically in a number of ways:
♦ Sharing on iWork.com. Apple provides a Web site, iwork.com, where you can invite others to view and comment on your Pages document. Click the iWork.com button on the Pages toolbar to get started, and the site will walk you through the rest of the process.
You’ll need an Internet connection to use iWork.com (naturally), as
well as an Apple ID and a working Apple Mail account. If you didn’t
create an Apple ID when buying your Mac or installing Snow Leopard,
you can save the day by clicking the Create New Account button on
the iWork.com site. If you’re not using Apple Mail yet, peruse Book
V, Chapter 2 for all the details.
♦ Sharing through e-mail. Click Share⇒Send via Mail, and you can choose to add your Pages document to a Mail message in three different formats: as a native Pages document file as a Word format document; or as a PDF file. After you’ve selected a format, Pages obligingly launches Apple Mail for you automatically and creates a new message, ready for you to address and send!
♦ Sharing through iWeb. Again, click the Share menu, but this time choose Send to iWeb. Pages automatically opens the iWeb site you last edited and provides your Pages document as a native Pages document file or as a PDF file. (If your visitors may be using PCs, choose the PDF option.)
♦ Exporting. Don’t forget that Pages can export your work in one of four different formats: a PDF document; a Word format document; an RTF (Rich Text Format) file; or even plain text. Click Share⇒Export, pick your format, click Next, and then select the location where Pages should save the file. Click Export and sit back while your favorite desktop publishing application does all the work.
To keep
your document as close to how it appears in Pages as possible, I
recommend either PDF or Word. Your document will retain far more of
your original formatting than an RTF or plain-text document
would.