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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS2
User Guide
To display and set Asian type options
By default, Photoshop hides Asian type options in the Character palette and Paragraph palette. To view and set
options for working with Chinese, Japanese, and Korean type, you must select Show Asian Text Options in the Prefer
ences dialog box. You can also control how font names are displayed—in English or in the native language.
1
Choose Edit > Preferences > Type (Windows) or Photoshop > Preferences > Type (Mac OS).
2
Select from the following options:
Show Asian Text Options
Displays Asian type options in the Character and Paragraph palettes.
Show Font Names In English
Displays Asian font names in English.
To reduce spacing around Asian type characters
Tsume
reduces the space around a character by a specified percentage value. As a result, the character itself is not
stretched or squeezed. Instead, the space between the character’s bounding box and the em box is compressed. When
tsume is added to a character, spacing around both sides of the character is reduced by an equal percentage.
1
Select the characters you want to adjust.
2
In the Character palette, enter or select a percentage for Tsume
. The greater the percentage, the tighter the
compression between characters. At 100% (the maximum value), there is no space between the character’s bounding
box and its em box.
To specify how leading is measured in Asian type
1
Select the paragraphs you want to adjust.
2
From the Paragraph palette menu, choose one of the following:
Top-To-Top Leading
Measures the spacing between lines of type from the top of one line to the top of the next line.
The first line of type in a paragraph is aligned flush with the top of the bounding box.
Bottom-To-Bottom Leading
Measures the space between lines from the type baseline. Space appears between the
first line of type and the bounding box.
A check mark indicates which option is selected. The leading option you choose does not affect the amount of
leading between lines, only how the leading is measured.
Note:
Top-To-Top Leading and Bottom-To-Bottom Leading are not available for vertical text.
To use tate-chu-yoko
Tate-chu-yoko
(also called
kumimoji
and
renmoji
) is a block of horizontal type laid out within vertical type lines.
Using tate-chu-yoko makes it easier to read half-width characters such as numbers, dates, and short foreign words
in vertical text.