MasterClass 4 – Style Basics and Management Suppliment – The 7 Laws of Style

The 7 Laws of Style

1LAW 1
1 All paragraph formatting should be applied through appropriate paragraph styles. Use the least possible direct formatting. Do not use the Format Painter.

Thorough use of styles, backed by appropriate templates, enables Word to work just this way. Direct formatting may seem to be a quick solution to special formatting needs, but it makes it difficult to “see” the source of formatting and to allow clean reformatting when a document needs to travel. The Format Painter is even worse, creating invisible formatting links that ought to be controlled by proper application of styles.

2LAW 2
Format Follows Function. With a nod of the head to our architect friends, this law tells us to name styles for the function text performs in a document, rather than the method of formatting.

For instance, the most common text in many documents will use Body Text style. If in some documents it needs to be single spaced, while in others double spaced, don’t use a “Single Space” style for one and a “Double Spaced Style” for the other. Use Body Text in both, but change the settings for Body Text (preferably through application of a grouped set of styles maintained in a template). Then the document will be instantly and accurately transformed from the formats required by one practice to those of another, with no fiddling around with formatting.

3LAW 3
Use common names for styles across the body of similar documents. E.g. documents shared within a particular infrastructure. Use Body Text (or your own created ‘body’ style) as the style for the body text of all documents, Headings 1 through 9 as the style names for heading levels, and so on. Then, to change the overall formatting of documents, store the appropriate style settings in a template, and use the Style Gallery to switch formats.

4LAW 4
Avoid applying Normal style. Use Normal style as a base for other styles. Using Normal Style itself violates LAW 2.

 

5LAW 5
Change locally, then propagate globally, but do not use the “Automatically Update” setting for any styles.

The Automatically Update setting can cause nearly instantaneous havoc with document formatting. It represents a solution to an intrinsic issue in ease of use for Word. While styles have all the power we have described, modifying and managing them can be difficult to learn, and often, even for experienced users, difficult to do. To modify styles, users must dig through 5 levels of menus and dialogs, then climb back again. When you get there, the connection between the settings and text may be very difficult to see.

Automatically Update was supposed to solve that. For instance, changing Left and Right Indents or tab settings could be accomplished directly and visually with the controls on the Ruler. Then, with Automatically Update on, these changes would immediately change the style settings the same way. Unfortunately this can also happen accidentally, leaving users confused and frustrated.

Word has a better, more controllable way to spread local formatting changes to the style applied to a paragraph. Make the font, spacing and indent changes to one paragraph of the appropriate style. Then, select the paragraph including its paragraph mark. With the formatting toolbar on, press [CTRL]+[SHIFT]+S ] (or mouse click on the style name in the toolbar) and press ENTER. If (and only if) you have changed the formatting of the paragraph from that of its style, a Modify Style dialog will appear asking whether “you wish to modify the style to reflect recent changes” or reapply the formatting of the style to the paragraph. Choosing the first will then propagate the local changes to the style and change all paragraphs in the document with that style.

  1. Catch 1 This technique does not work unless a toolbar is showing with the style name.
  2. Catch 2 Spacing and indent changes can propagate using this technique whether or not the paragraph mark for the paragraph has been selected. Font changes for the paragraph as a whole can propagate only if the paragraph mark has been selected. If not, this technique will cause the font to revert to that of the style. Thus, learning the technique by selecting the whole paragraph, including its paragraph mark, achieves more consistent results.
  3. Catch 3 This technique can leave hidden direct formatting. In a future column, we will look at a macro shortcut that will support these technique without the catches.

6LAW 6
Use no empty paragraphs. Empty paragraphs are a relic of typing. When used for spacing – instead of styles set with proper paragraph spacing – they ‘corrupt’ the clean global transformation of document formats.

7LAW 7
Tie automatic numbering to heading styles.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.