We can look forward to additional fonts and the ability to
edit line spaces and margins.
Not exact matches
The one function the Kobo Touch does not even have is the ability to
edit your margins and
line spacing.
There are six different fonts, 7 different font sizes and 3 different ways to
edit margins and
line spacing.
You have slider bars when you
edit your fonts that determine the
line -
spacing, margins, and font size.
It does not allow you to
edit margins or paragraphs or
line spacing right now.
There are a few things about the Sony PRS - 650 that could use improving, mainly the same things that are listed on the PRS - 350 review: the lack of styling options, such as changing
line -
spacing, margins, font type, etc, all of which requires adding fonts and
editing the CSS file of an ebook to change styling; the fact that landscape mode breaks pages into two sections for ebooks, showing duplicate sentences; and other minor annoyances like having to go through multiple menu selections for certain features and settings.
You can
edit such facets as
line space settings,
line break, alignment font size and so on.
1 Structure, Plan and Write 1.1 Turning Real Life Into Fiction 1.2 Kurt Vonnegut on the The Shapes of Stories 1.3 The 12 Key Pillars of Novel Construction 1.4 Plot Worksheets to Help You Organize Your Thoughts 1.5 The Snowflake Method For Designing A Novel 1.6 Seven Tips From Ernest Hemingway on How to Write Fiction 1.7 Study the Writing Habits of Ernest Hemingway 1.8 Making Your Characters Come Alive 1.9 Vision, Voice and Vulnerability 1.10 10 Points on Craft by Barry Eisler 1.11 Coming up with Character Names 1.12 Using the Right «Camera Angle» for Your Writing 1.13 The Art of «Layering» in Fiction Writing 1.14 Weaving Humor Into Your Stories 1.15 On Telling Better Stories 1.16 The 25 Best Opening
Lines in Western Literature 1.17 6 Ways to Hook Your Readers from the Very First
Line 1.18 Plot Development: Climax, Resolution, and Your Main Character 1.19 How to Finish A Novel 2 Get Feedback 2.1 Finding Beta Readers 2.2 Understanding the Role of Beta Readers 2.3 Find Readers By Writing Fan Fiction 2.4 How Fan Fiction Can Make You a Better Writer 3
Edit Your Book 3.1 Find an Editor 3.2 Directory of Book Editors 3.3 Self
Editing for Fiction Writers 3.4 The Top Ten Book Self Editing Tips 3.5 Advice for self - editing your novel 3.6 Tips on How to Edit a Book 4 Format and Package Your Book 4.1 The Thinking That Goes Into Making a Book Cover 4.2 Design Your Book Cover 4.3 Format Your Book 4.4 Choosing a Title for Your Fiction Book 5 Publish 5.1 A Listing of Scams and Alerts from Writers Beware 5.2 Publishing Advice from JA Konrath 5.3 How to Find a Literary Agent 5.4 Understanding Literary Agents 5.5 Association of Authors» Representatives 5.6 Self - Publishing Versus Traditional Publishing 5.7 Lulu, Lightning Source or Create
Editing for Fiction Writers 3.4 The Top Ten Book Self
Editing Tips 3.5 Advice for self - editing your novel 3.6 Tips on How to Edit a Book 4 Format and Package Your Book 4.1 The Thinking That Goes Into Making a Book Cover 4.2 Design Your Book Cover 4.3 Format Your Book 4.4 Choosing a Title for Your Fiction Book 5 Publish 5.1 A Listing of Scams and Alerts from Writers Beware 5.2 Publishing Advice from JA Konrath 5.3 How to Find a Literary Agent 5.4 Understanding Literary Agents 5.5 Association of Authors» Representatives 5.6 Self - Publishing Versus Traditional Publishing 5.7 Lulu, Lightning Source or Create
Editing Tips 3.5 Advice for self -
editing your novel 3.6 Tips on How to Edit a Book 4 Format and Package Your Book 4.1 The Thinking That Goes Into Making a Book Cover 4.2 Design Your Book Cover 4.3 Format Your Book 4.4 Choosing a Title for Your Fiction Book 5 Publish 5.1 A Listing of Scams and Alerts from Writers Beware 5.2 Publishing Advice from JA Konrath 5.3 How to Find a Literary Agent 5.4 Understanding Literary Agents 5.5 Association of Authors» Representatives 5.6 Self - Publishing Versus Traditional Publishing 5.7 Lulu, Lightning Source or Create
editing your novel 3.6 Tips on How to
Edit a Book 4 Format and Package Your Book 4.1 The Thinking That Goes Into Making a Book Cover 4.2 Design Your Book Cover 4.3 Format Your Book 4.4 Choosing a Title for Your Fiction Book 5 Publish 5.1 A Listing of Scams and Alerts from Writers Beware 5.2 Publishing Advice from JA Konrath 5.3 How to Find a Literary Agent 5.4 Understanding Literary Agents 5.5 Association of Authors» Representatives 5.6 Self - Publishing Versus Traditional Publishing 5.7 Lulu, Lightning Source or Create
Space?
(
EDIT: hmmm... maybe my creating and ordering dummy books that include different samples of font sizes,
line spacing, margins, etc. isn't such a bad idea after all.
Working with
lines, loops, layers, palindromes and the friction of contradiction I aim to create
spaces to draw attention to how the viewer traffics with the world by filling,
editing and narrating.
Challenging the eye of the beholder, Reed's dynamic constellations never cease to open up new pictorial
spaces: the energetic and singular gesture brushstroke of former works progressively condenses into structures of
lines, waves or loops that often seem like
edits from some other context, called into offer counterpoint in new visual arrangement.
Publications include Chandigarh is in India,
edited by Shanay Jhaveri (Shoestring Publishers, 2016), Passages: Indian Art Today (Daab Media, 2014),
Lines of Control, Partition as a Productive
Space (Green Cardamom 2012), Unfixed: Postcolonial Photography in Contemporary Art (Jap Sam Books, 2013); Empire Strikes Back: Contemporary Indian Art Today (Saatchi) and Manual for Treason: Sharjah Biennial
edited by Murtaza Vali (2011), and in the upcoming publication Global Photography: A Critical History (2019).
Other tiny
edits for the paper:
Line 69: myriad factors, not myriad of factors
Line 122: is, not is that there is [a minor sylistic point, some may disagree) Throughout: I suggest citations such as ``... et.al., (2010)» should have a
space preceding the open parenthesis.