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Work with overset cells, Table strokes and fills, About table strokes and fills – Adobe InDesign CS3 User Manual

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INDESIGN CS3

User Guide

264

Unmerge cells

Place the insertion point in the merged cell and choose Table > Unmerge Cells.

Split cells

You can split cells horizontally or vertically, which is especially useful when creating form tables. You can select
multiple cells and split them vertically or horizontally.

1

Place the insertion point in the cell you want to split, or select a row, column, or block of cells.

2

Choose Table > Split Cell Vertically or Split Cell Horizontally.

Work with overset cells

In most cases, a table cell will expand vertically to accommodate new text and graphics being added. However, if you
set a fixed row height and add text or graphics that are too large for the cell, a small red dot appears in the lower right
corner of the cell, indicating that the cell is overset.

You cannot flow overset text into another cell. Instead, edit or resize the contents, or expand the cell or the text frame
in which the table appears.

In the case of inline graphics or text with fixed leading, it is possible for the cell contents to extend beyond cell edges.
You can select the Clip Contents To Cell option, so that any text or inline graphics that otherwise extend beyond any
cell edge are clipped to the cell boundary. However, when inline graphics are overset to extend beyond cell bottom
edges (Horizontal) this does not apply.

Display the contents of an overset cell

Do one of the following:

Increase the size of the cell.

Change the text formatting. To select the cell’s contents, click in the overset cell, press Esc, and then use the Control
panel to format the text.

Clip an image in a cell

If an image is too large for a cell, it extends beyond the cell borders. You can clip the parts of the image that extend
beyond the cell borders.

1

Place the insertion point in the cell you want to clip, or select the cell or cells you want to affect.

2

Choose Table > Cell Options > Text.

3

Select Clip Contents To Cell, and then click OK.

Table strokes and fills

About table strokes and fills

You can add strokes and fills to your tables in a number of ways. Use the Table Options dialog box to change the
stroke of the table border, and to add alternating strokes and fills to columns and rows. To change the strokes and
fills of individual cells or header/footer cells, use the Cell Options dialog box, or use the Swatches, Stroke, and Color
panels.