PitMan71 Posted Thursday at 02:01 PM Share Posted Thursday at 02:01 PM Hello All This is probably obvious to some, but what is the difference between Rich Text and Text in Chief? I know Rich Text is best for long lists of notes and such so I am more wondering if there is some difference other than the content itself. Thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chrisb222 Posted Thursday at 02:10 PM Share Posted Thursday at 02:10 PM 7 minutes ago, PitMan71 said: Hello All This is probably obvious to some, but what is the difference between Rich Text and Text in Chief? I know Rich Text is best for long lists of notes and such so I am more wondering if there is some difference other than the content itself. Main difference, among others, standard text style, size, and color can be controlled by layer, allowing different styles for different plan views. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Solution Alaskan_Son Posted Thursday at 03:17 PM Solution Share Posted Thursday at 03:17 PM Rich Text has a number of benefits over Standard or Simple Text including but not limited to: The ability to have multiple colors, formatting options, alignment options, and text sizes in a single text box. The ability to have some sections of the text be all UPPERCASE and other sections in the same box be Standard Case. The ability mix and match Line Spacing and Margin settings in a single text box The ability to use various Bullet styles along with optional Number Prefixes and Suffixes The ability to insert one or more clickable hyperlinks Standard or Simple Text on the other hand has several benefits of its own including: The ability to create adjustable tab stops or rows The ability to display gridlines The ability to create a single link that can be accessed through the edit tools Perhaps most importantly, the ability to dynamically control your text by either layer or by text style My suggestion is to use the one that makes the most sense for the situation, but but BUT, if you're not sure and don't specifically need a Rich Text feature, use standard Text. Standard Text will give you more options that you're likely to want in the future (namely the ones mentioned in the last bullet point) plus you can always convert Text to Rich Text. You cannot simply do the inverse and convert Rich Text to Text. 1 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PitMan71 Posted Thursday at 03:26 PM Author Share Posted Thursday at 03:26 PM Thanks guys. This helps me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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