Pages - Linking Floating Text Boxes

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Linking Floating Text Boxes

If the text you type doesn’t fit in a floating text box, you can create a linked text box
so that the text flows from one text box to another. Whenever you edit or format the
text in the first text box, the linked text box is also affected. Linked text boxes can be
positioned separate from each other in the document.

Here are ways to work with linked text boxes:
To create a floating text box, see “

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Adding a Floating Text Box” on page 104.

Position and resize the text box as you want, and then type text in it.
When the text box is full, a clipping indicator appears at the bottom of the text box.
This indicates that the text extends beyond the bottom of the box.

A clipping indicator shows
the text extends beyond the
text box.

Click the blue square on the
right to link to another text
box or create a new linked
text box.

A blue square on the

left indicates there are

no text boxes linked

before this one.

To link to another text box or create a linked text box, click the blue square on the

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right side of the text box, and click another text box or click somewhere on the page
(or choose Format > Text Box > Add Linked Text Box). To cancel linking, press Escape.
The new text box has a solid blue square on its left side. This indicates that this text
box is linked to a previous one.

A solid blue square on
the right indicates this
text box is linked before
another one.

A blue square indicates
this text box is the last in
this series.

A solid blue square on

the left indicates this

text box is linked to a

previous one.

To link selected text boxes, Command-click to select the text boxes you want to link,

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and then choose Format > Text Box > Link Selected Text Boxes. The text boxes are
linked in the order in which you selected them.
To break the connection between linked text boxes, choose Format > Text Box > “Break

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Connection into Text Box,” or choose Format > Text Box > “Break Connection out of
Text Box.”

106

Chapter 5

Working with Text

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Chapter 5

Working with Text

107

To hide connection lines between text boxes, choose Format > Text Box > Hide

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Connection Lines. To display connection lines between text boxes, choose Format >
Text Box > Show Connection Lines.
To reposition the text boxes, select and drag them. The flow of the text inside the

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boxes always follows the order in which the boxes were created, regardless of where
you position them in the document.
To copy and paste linked text boxes, select all of them, choose Edit > Copy, and choose

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Edit > Paste without deselecting the original text boxes. The copy is pasted directly
over the original text boxes and is selected. Drag the selected copy to its new location.
If you copy and paste a single linked box, you will create a single unlinked text box,
identical to the one you copied.
If a single table flows through linked text boxes, you must copy or duplicate the first
text box in which the table appears in order to copy the table as well.
To select only the text in all the linked text boxes, select text in the first box, and then

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press Command-A.