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When and When Not to Use StylesStyles are designed to save you time. Here are some tips for deciding if you need to create a style:
Sometimes, other tools will work better than styles. Here are situations where you may want to choose another strategy:
And finally, some situations call for yet another CorelDRAW efficiency expert: scripts. Well get to them in Chapter 33. Working with TemplatesTemplates help you organize and manage styles. You can store a group of styles in a template designed for a specific type of drawing, such as a slide presentation or a sales brochure. Template files store more than just styles, though; they can also save page-layout information and text and graphic objects. A template for a slide presentation could include the page setup and the company logo, as well as styles for bullets and titles. A template for sales brochures might contain the graphic elements that appear in every brochure. In addition to the templates you create yourself, DRAW includes several hundred predesigned templates for everything from announcements to box designs. Templates are separate files with extensions of .cdt instead of .cdr. They contain all of the formatting and styles you choose to store in them. This is convenient for your regularly recurring projects, because you can keep all the styles you use for a particular project or client in a template, safely protected from your day-to-day activities. DRAW always starts with the default template, coreldrw.cdt, loaded, but changing to a different template is easy.
The Default TemplateThe coreldrw.cdt template includes default styles for graphics, artistic text, and paragraph text. You can modify this template by adding styles or changing the default styles, following the procedures already outlined in this chapter. After making style changes, if you want the changes to be available in future drawings using this template, you must save it. If you dont, the new and modified styles are only saved in the .cdr filethey do not become part of the template. To save changes to the default coreldrw.cdt template, select Template Ø Save As Default for New Documents from the dockers context menu. You can also use Template Ø Save As to explicitly save over the top of coreldrw.cdtthese two actions would have the same result of altering DRAWs default template. And for good measure, you can achieve the same result by going to Tools Ø Options Ø Document, checking Save Options As Defaults for New Documents, and then browsing the list of settings whose current conditions you could choose to be defaults.
Creating a New TemplateInstead of filling up coreldrw.cdt with all kinds of different styles, you may find it more effective to save particular groups of styles in individual templates. Then, when youre ready for a certain set of styles, you can just load the desired template. As mentioned earlier, DRAWs templates can contain more than just styles; they can contain any element that would normally go into a drawing. With templates, you can give yourself a major-league running start toward the completion of a repetitive project. You can create the template before youve made style changes, before youve laid out the page, and before you have created objects; or you can do it afterward. In fact, its probably more practical to save the template after making these changes to a drawing, so you dont have to continue to tweak it as you refine your work. You must use the Styles docker (Ctrl+F5) to create templates because the object context menu does not provide access to template creation (only style creation). So to create a template, you select Template Ø Save As from the dockers context menu and name the template. If you just want the styles from the current drawing, youre done. If you want the page layout and the elements on the page also, click the With Contents option to save the page setup and any text and graphic objects that may be in the document you plan on making a template. In Figure 31.5, we are about to save the current lineup of styles as a template for newsletter creation. Note that we have created several new artistic text styles and that we have eliminated all of those dreadful bullet styles. Note two other things:
The Newsletter template in Figure 31.5 is quite sparse, to be frank, making it suitable for newsletters that might take radically different forms each month. For a more structured publication, the template could be quite specific, with many fill-in-the-blank elements already in place.
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