Ensuring Consistency with Character and Paragraph Styles
Manually formatting text isn't difficult, but it sure is tedious if you need to format a lot of it. And what guarantee do you have that you and all your co-workers will format text consistently? When you consider changing the formatting of every single headline or caption throughout a publication, it's enough to make you scream. That's why you need to understand how to use character and paragraph styles. In most cases, the character and paragraph styles for an InCopy document are created by a graphic designer using InDesign, but even if you're not the person who creates the styles you need to understand how they're created and how to apply them to your text.TipChange the default formatting of text in InCopy by double-clicking the [Basic Paragraph] style in the Paragraph Styles palette and making changes in the Paragraph Style Options dialog.Open the Character Styles and Paragraph Styles palettes from the Window > Type & Tables submenu to see all the styles available in the active document (Figure 3.16). To apply a character style, select a range of text as small as one character and click the style name in the Character Styles palette. To apply a paragraph style to a single paragraph, insert your cursor anywhere in the paragraph and click the style name in the Paragraph Styles palette. You can apply a paragraph style to multiple paragraphs if all the paragraphs are selected first.
Figure 3.16. Use the Character Styles and Paragraph Styles palettes to apply styles to your text with just a click.

Figure 3.17. View character and paragraph style options by double-clicking the style name.
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Using Next Style
Two powerful options for paragraph styles you should know about are Next Style and Nested Styles. The Next Style option, set in the General section of the Paragraph Style Options (Figure 3.17) dialog, chooses which paragraph style to apply to the following paragraph. For example, you can create a paragraph style called Headline that has a Next Style option set to another paragraph style called Byline. Now, when you type a paragraph with the Headline style and press Return/Enter, the next paragraph is automatically formatted with the Byline paragraph style. You can string multiple styles together with the Next Style option, such as setting the Next Style for Byline to Body.This is great if you type all your text in InCopy, and if you always plan ahead, but we realize that's not how the process always works. In cases where you import text from other sources or wait to apply styles until after the text has already been typed, there's a great trick for applying Next Styles you need to know about. First, select all the related paragraphs that need a sequence of next styles. Then Control/right-click on the name of the first paragraph style in the Paragraph Styles palette and choose Apply [Style Name] then Next Style. This instantly applies the first paragraph style and any other Next Style definitions and saves you a lot of time.
Using Nested Styles
Another powerful paragraph style option is the Nested Style feature, which strings together multiple character styles into one intelligent paragraph style. We're not going to explain all the details of creating Nested Styles, but we want to make sure you're aware of the feature and are not surprised when you see one for the first time. For example, a nested paragraph style could use a bold character style through the first comma, an italicized character style through the first colon, and then plain text until the end of the paragraph (Figure 3.18). This is a very efficient way to style repetitive text such as a photo caption without having to apply each character style individually.
Figure 3.18. Nested styles eliminate repetitive character formatting by combining multiple character styles into an intelligent paragraph style.
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Using Quick Apply to Apply Styles
Character and paragraph styles save you time, ensure consistency, and make future updates much easier, but the traditional method of applying styles by selecting text and clicking on the style name in the Style palettes can be tedious. Some documents may have as many as 150 or more styles, which makes the situation even more unwieldy. Enabling the Small Rows option in the palette menu for the Character Styles and Paragraph Styles palettes lets you squeeze more styles into the same space (Figure 3.19), but scrolling through that many styles to find the correct one can still be a drag.
Figure 3.19. The Small Palette Rows option can squeeze more styles into the Styles palettes, but the new Quick Apply feature makes the whole process of styling text more efficient.
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Figure 3.20. Quick Apply makes it easy to apply character and paragraph styles quickly and without taking your hands off the keyboard.

Eliminating Manual Overrides
Sometimes when you apply paragraph styles to text you'll notice a plus mark (+) next to the style name in the Paragraph Styles palette. This plus mark indicates there's a manaul override on the selected text that you might want to eliminate. When you apply a paragraph style to text that already has custom formatting, the custom formatting is retained as an override to the applied paragraph style. Option/Alt-click on the style name in the Paragraph Styles palette to eliminate the override. This resets the selected text to the active style definition, and the plus mark (+) goes away.TipYou can also click the Clear Overrides button

Managing Character and Paragraph Styles
When there's a character or paragraph style in one InCopy file that you want to use in another file, you have two options. You could try to recreate the style from scratch in your InCopy file, but that process is tedious and prone to mistakes. The point of sharing styles is to ensure they are identical, so instead of recreating text styles, you should import styles directly from one InCopy document into another by following these steps:
1. | Open the Character Styles or Paragraph Styles palette and choose Load All Styles from the palette menu. Notice there are also palette menu commands for Load Character Styles and Load Paragraph Styles in their respective palettes, but these commands just open same dialog box with different options pre-selected. |
2. | Select the InDesign (.indd), InCopy (.incx), or InCopy Template (.inct) file that contains the text style(s) you want to load and click Open. |
3. | Paragraph styles are listed alphabetically at the top of the list, and Character styles are listed alphabetically at the bottom of the list. Check the styles you want to import and use the Check All and Uncheck All buttons to help you get the selection you need. You can choose to load just one style, a few styles, or all of them. |
4. | If two styles with the same name exist in the two documents, InCopy forces you to either Auto-Rename the loaded style or use the existing style definition. In the event of such a "collision," the incoming and existing style definitions are listed at the bottom of the dialog so you can compare them and choose the one you want (Figure 3.21). |
5. | After you select the styles to load, click OK, and InCopy adds them to the document. |
Figure 3.21. Select styles to load from one document into another.
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Figure 3.22. You must remap a used style before it can be deleted.
