Specify how leading is measured in asian type, Use tate - chu - yoko, Align asian characters with mojisoroe – Adobe Photoshop CC 2014 v.14.xx User Manual
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Bottom-to-bottom Leading
Note:
Note:
Specify how leading is measured in Asian type
1. Select the paragraphs you want to adjust.
2. Choose a leading option from the Paragraph panel menu.
Measures the spacing
between lines of type from the top of one line to the top of the next line. When you use top-to-top leading, the first line of type in a paragraph
is aligned flush with the top of the bounding box.
For horizontal type, measures the space between lines of type from the type baseline. When you use bottom-
to-bottom leading, space appears between the first line of type and the bounding box. A check mark indicates which option is selected.
The leading option you choose does not affect the amount of leading between lines, only how the leading is measured.
Use tate-chu-yoko
Tate-chu-yoko (also called kumimoji and renmoji) is a block of horizontal type laid out within vertical type lines. Using tate-chu-yoko makes it
easier to read half-width characters such as numbers, dates, and short foreign words in vertical text.
Numerals without tate-chu-yoko (left) compared to numerals rotated with tate-chu-yoko (right)
1. Select the characters you want to rotate.
2. Choose Tate-Chu-Yoko from the Character panel menu. A check mark indicates that the option is turned on.
Using tate-chu-yoko does not prevent you from editing and formatting type; you can edit and apply formatting options to rotated
characters just as you do to other characters.
Align Asian characters with mojisoroe
Mojisoroe is the alignment of characters in Asian type. When a line of text contains different sizes of characters, you can specify how to align text
to the largest characters in the line: to the top, center, or bottom of the em box (right, center, and left for vertical frames), to the roman baseline, or
to the top or bottom of the ICF box (right or left for vertical frames). ICF (Ideographic Character Space) is the average height and width used by
the font designer to design the ideographic characters which comprise a font.
Character alignment options
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