From your workflow description, I bet you are quite a newbie for text processing application, i.e. you apply stylistic variations manually using menu commands, toolbar buttons or keyboard equivalents (like Ctrl
+B
for bold). This manual application is called direct formatting and is the cause of many later difficulties.
The intended workflow of Writer is the use of styles. The most frequent categories are page styles (to describe the general look of the page, including its margins, header and footer), paragraph styles (to describe paragraph properties like font face and size, indents = additional margins to the page margins, vertical spacing, …) and character styles (font attributes which override the paragraph attributes).
You are encouraged to download and read the Writer Guide to discover the power of styles and learn how to use it.
The main discourse in your document should be styled Text Body and not Default Style as is probably presently styled your text. Default Style is a “technical” style which defines attributes for all others.
Text Body can be customised to fit your needs: justified alignment and vertical spacing mainly.
- Make the side style-pane visible if not already there with
F11
. It opens with a view of the paragraph styles
- Locate Text Body, right-click on its name and
Modify
- In
Alignment
tab, set Justified
- The
Indents & Spacing
tab contains what you need, change the settings (see below)
- When done, click
OK
Select your paragraphs to become Text Body (leave aside those considered as headings or titles) and either double-click on Text Body name in the style-pane or select Text Body from the drop-down menu in the toolbar.
Indents & Spacing settings:
The indents allow you to add more widths to the page horizontal margins for this paragraph style (this means you can play on this parameter in different paragraph styles to emphasise differences in significance of contents). The first line parameter is what you are looking for.
A first line indent must never be done with spaces because spaces can be expanded or shrinked for justification purpose and have thus no fixed width as you noted. It should also not be done with tabs because tabs are intended for tabular data and your first line in not part of a table.
Consequently, define what would be a nice-looking indent according to the paragraph width and font size. In Europe, an indentation of 1.0 to 1.5 cm is common.
Also, the spacing part allows to define the vertical distance separating this paragraph style from other paragraphs. Always use this settings instead of adding empty paragraphs. This uselessly complicates the structure of your document and may cause instability.
From your question, I understand some of your paragraphs need a first line indent and some don’t.
This can easily be handled by using several paragraph styles. Refer the Writer Guide to learn how to create your own styles.
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