If you prefer a certain type of word wrapping and want to set it to be the default, you can do so by clicking “Set as Default Layout” at the bottom of the same menu. It’s only available for certain types of word wrapping. Tip: “Edit Wrap Points” allows you to specify the outline of the image to which the text should wrap. Select the Layout tab, then click the Margins command. To format page margins: Word has a variety of predefined margin sizes to choose from. Depending on your needs, Word allows you to change your documents margin size. “Through” is similar to “Tight” however, if you also make use of the “Edit wrap points” functionality on the same menu, you can have the text wrap into whitespace inside an image. By default, a new documents margins are set to Normal, which means it has a one-inch space between the text and each edge. Click the Default button at the bottom of the dialog. In the Font dialog, change the font and/or font size to your preference. “Behind Text” overlays text over the image, conversely “In Front of Text” overlays the image on the text, obscuring it. You can do this by pressing Ctrl+D, by selecting Font on the Format menu, or by right-clicking in the default empty paragraph and choosing Font on the context menu. “Top and Bottom” allows text to be wrapped above and below the image, but no text can appear on either side. “Tight” is very similar to “Square” for rectangular images, however, for images in other shapes, “Tight” will wrap text following the shape of the image. “Square” allows text to completely wrap around the image, above, below, to the left and right. “In-Line with Text” is the default setting, and as described above, places the image at a specific point on a specific line. The word wrapping options are: “In Line with Text”, “Square”, “Tight”, “Through”, “Top and Bottom”, “Behind Text”, and “In Front of Text”. To configure the word wrapping settings, right-click an image, select “Wrap Text”, then select a wrapping option. The effect will review in the document, although it will mostly depend on their already being text there to wrap around the image. Tip: You see how the text will wrap around the image by just hovering your mouse over each of the options. To change the word wrapping of a specific image, right-click on it, click or hover your mouse over “Wrap Text” in the drop-down menu, then select your preferred word wrapping option for that image.
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