I know of two ways to accomplish this.
1. (the flush right command) will take effect
if placed either before the or within the .
2. Insert within each line of the text
the command , which shoves everything on that line which follows
to the far right.
----- Original Message -----
Subject: Re: headers with name and
page
In a message dated 8/23/03 1:00:57 PM Eastern Daylight
Time, mailto:hb@xxxxxxxxhb@xxxxxxxx writes:
Maybe I don't get your question, but if I do, the answer is very
simple. (Below, the angle brackets stand for the guillemets, which can
be typed in by going to expanded mode and typing
ctrl-anglebracket.)
>
You can use normal
formatting--just as you use for body text--anywhere inside the final
guillemet. E.g.,
- - > Art
Whoever
>
That would produce a header that
looks like
this:
- 1 - Myfile.txt August 23, 2003
Art Whoever
Body text
here............................ .............................................
And,
of course, your name would appear in bold face.
Is that the kind of
thing you wanted?
If you don't want to put the guillemets in
manually, you can go to the command line and enter them that way--e.g.,
by typing: pn
Thanks for the pointers, but what I'm
trying to do is to have flush right at the top of every page, the following
information:
Art Levine
1
next
page:
Art Levine
2
etc.
What's the exact
procedure to do that, from hitting F5 to get to the command line, and
step-by-step afterwards, what to do? Thanks for your advice. Also, I don't
know what a "guillemet" is and what it's supposed to look like....Thanks,
Art.
|