Bullet Points For Mac



Yup! The problem is a missing or corrupted Symbol font on your system.

There is no such thing as 'the most common bullets'. The bullet formats are
stored in the document, and they are 'whatever you last used in that
document'.

Bullet or bullet point symbol is a typographical symbol or glyph used to introduce items in a list. Bullet points can be circular, square, asterisk, black dot, diamond or arrow. Dot and Arrow symbol is the most commonly used as a bullet point symbol. When to use Bullet Points?

  • Select the same text frame, Type T to select the Type tool, and Alt+click (Windows) or Option+click (Mac OS) the Bulleted List or Numbered List button in the Control panel. Select Preview to see a live update. Choose List Type Bullets. Pick a bullet shown in the Bullet Character section below.
  • If you want to insert a list as you type rather than having to paste one in and modify it, simply hit Option + Tab and you've got your first bullet point ready to go. In addition, Stickies also supports the built-in dictionary so you can use your handy Control + Command +.
  • You should now see only the Bullet Point on the character map dialog. Double click on the symbol to select it. After you select the symbol, hit on the Copy button to copy. Now switch to where ever you wish to insert the symbol and press Ctrl+V to paste.
  • To a point, the velocity of the bullet will increase. However, at some point, the gasses driving the bullet have maxed out, and beyond that point, the bullet will begin to slow from friction with.

The Windows user would have applied bullets to Normal style, and in so
doing, has set the font to something you don't have, or to a character that
is not in your copy of the Symbol font.

This is just one reason why it's a really bad idea to use 'Normal' style for
'anything'. Word uses the Normal style for all manner of things all over
the document. If you define bullets onto some text in Normal Style, you've
set up a conflict: some 'Normal' paragraphs have bullets, some don't.

From there, it's only a matter of time before the document gives trouble.

You need to fix the bullet format in that document. Here's how:

Apply the style 'List Bullet' to those bulleted paragraphs. (In the
formatting palette, you need to set the 'List' window in the Style tab to
'All Styles' from 'Available Styles' or you will not see the List Bullet
style unless you have used it in that document).

Then set the format of List Bullet to be what you want. The easiest way to
do that is to set the format for one paragraph with List Bullet applied,
then:

1) Select the entire paragraph you just changed
2) Display the Formatting Palette
3) Open the Style tab
4) In the 'Pick formatting to apply' window (the lower one)
5) Click the blue paragraph symbol against the List Bullet style
6) Choose 'Update to match selection' from the drop-down that appears.

This gives you a dedicated style for bullets, set up the way you like them.

Do the same with List Number.

Mac

7) Then go back to the formatting palette,
8) select either style,
9) and click the paragraph mark again.
10) This time, choose 'Modify'.
11) In the dialog that opens, check 'Add to template' and ensure that
'Automatically update' remains unchecked.
12) Save and quit Word.

Takes five minutes.

The second half of the procedure stores the new definitions for all of your
styles in your Normal.dotm template, so that every document you create from
now will have those style settings in it when you create it, so you never
have to set it again.

Once you get the hang of this, set up Body Text to your taste and use that
in place of Normal. Set up the Heading 1 through Heading 9 series of styles
for your headings. Set up the Header and Footer styles, and the Page Number
style.

Add to Template and quit: and all your formatting is DONE, for the rest of
your life :-)

There is such a thing as 'Too much automation'. Word has this design error
as a major problem.

Bullet Points For Action Plan

The USA FAA is currently extremely worried about this in relation to
airlines. All airlines now instruct their pilots to fly the entire trip on
the autopilot. They do this because the computers fly much more accurately
than the pilots do, which saves fuel. Air Traffic Control also insists that
the pilots are on 'automatic' before they will permit the aircraft to go up
to the heights where airliners fly most efficiently: the computer accuracy
enables them to get more airliners closer together in the same block of
airspace.

The problem that is scaring the hell out of the FAA and the CAA is this: If
there is a problem ... Say, the aircraft hits severe turbulence that exceeds
the ability of the autopilot to correct it ... The autopilot kicks off, and
hands the aircraft back to the pilot.

But it might be YEARS since the pilots manually flew an aircraft, and they
have forgotten how! Sure, they have a general idea, but when the autopilot
suddenly shouts 'YOURS!!' in the middle of a thunderstorm at night with no
visibility, you have to know EXACTLY how, instantly.

That's what some people think bought down flight AF447 with the death of all
on board: they hit a thunderstorm and the autopilot clicked off with the
airplane upside down. The pilots couldn't get it right-side up before the
force of the air ripped it apart. Because they had forgotten how to fly...

Scary...

Same with Microsoft Word. If you had been a WordPerfect user, you would not
have needed to ask this question, because in WP you had to define your
bullets each time you wanted some, so you did it automatically without
needing to think.

In Word, everything is so automatic that normal users these days have no
idea how it works, or how to fix it when it goes wrong.

Bullet Point Copy And Paste

I guess we need a 'Fix this document' button :-)


Cheers

On 10/12/09 2:18 AM, in article 59bae602.1@webcrossing.JaKIaxP2ac0,

Welcome to Apple Support Communities.

Bullet Points Mac Pages


In Inspector,Text, Bullets, turn Text Bullet on, as you've already done.

When you begin typing the first entry, the first bullet in the cell should appear.

When the first bullet entry is complete, use Option+Return to take you to the next (empty) bullet point down within the cell...

The cell should expand downward to accept each new entry. (I typed in the lowercase letters following each bullet for the illustration below)


To make it easier to edit the bullet points in the cell, drag the double-line (looks like an equal sign) slider that appears in the far right lower corner of the 'EDIT' box, so the edit box becomes large enough to display all the cell contents.



Incidently, Option+Return also works to make multi-line cell entries without bullets too. I often use it for long descriptive text in column or row border cells.

Bullet Points Mac 10.14


How To Do Bullet Points For Mac

Message was edited by: kostby