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Adobe FRAMEMAKER 7 - Page 214

Adobe FRAMEMAKER 7
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LESSON 9
234
Anchored Frames and Graphics
3 If a graphic has a resolution of 72 dpi, and you import it at 144 dpi, what happens to
the size of the imported graphic?
4 Why might you want to reuse—that is, copy and paste—an anchored frame?
5 What is a drop cap?
6 What does the text line tool do?
7 What is the shortcut for resizing a frame to fit a graphic?
8 How do you import a QuickTime® movie into a document?
Answers
1 An anchored frame is a frame that can contain a graphic or text and is anchored to the
text. The frame and its contents move with the anchor, so you don’t have to reposition the
graphic or text when you edit the document.
2 Graphics can appear in several positions, such as between words; between paragraphs;
anchored to a spot in the text, but positioned in the page margin; or relative to a spot on
the page (such as at the top).
3 Doubling the dpi makes the imported graphic half the size of the original.
4 It might contain the graphic that you want to use. It might also have properties that
you want to apply to another graphic, such as size and position.
5 A drop cap is a large capital letter set into a piece of body text. It usually occurs at the
beginning of a section of text.
6 The text line tool lets you create a single line of text that FrameMaker 7.0 treats
independently from other text.
7 Press Esc m p to resize the frame to fit the graphic.
8 Start a new default portrait document. Choose > File > Import File and locate the
movie file to import.

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