Someone recently asked how to create a circle that has text, where each word is equally spaced apart.
Here is one method to achieve that.
See the instructions and the graphic provided.
(Extra Note - the role that the "ending period" plays (see instructions) ... could have been served by any shape. Including another rectangle that is very narrow. Perhaps a rectangle that is 1 percent the width of the Spacer rectangles that were used. Any shape - to prevent the end of your text from butting right up to the beginning of your text.)
Hi. Yes, I am aware of that word spacing option, at varying distances.
Since the original post asked for equal spacing between the words, what I presented here was my quick "fix" for that.
And, as I shared previously, the "spacer" could be any width, with the last "spacer" (the one just hehind the last word) could be just a tad wider, such as 101%, to still maintain the distances and prevent the ending word butting up next to the beginning word.
What I shared was just one possible method. I am glad there are other ideas being shared.
Hi.
Someone recently asked how to create a circle that has text, where each word is equally spaced apart.
Here is one method to achieve that.
See the instructions and the graphic provided.
(Extra Note - the role that the "ending period" plays (see instructions) ... could have been served by any shape. Including another rectangle that is very narrow. Perhaps a rectangle that is 1 percent the width of the Spacer rectangles that were used. Any shape - to prevent the end of your text from butting right up to the beginning of your text.)
Enjoy.
Ken
Moving the sentence initial from the beginning to the end might enable you to avoid the period:
> ere is the text I want equally spaced between each word H
There is a text tool-bar control that allows one to vary spacing between words.
Hi. Yes, I am aware of that word spacing option, at varying distances.
Since the original post asked for equal spacing between the words, what I presented here was my quick "fix" for that.
And, as I shared previously, the "spacer" could be any width, with the last "spacer" (the one just hehind the last word) could be just a tad wider, such as 101%, to still maintain the distances and prevent the ending word butting up next to the beginning word.
What I shared was just one possible method. I am glad there are other ideas being shared.
Thank you and have a great day.