>>> The help says it gives the sum of the Ascending, Leading and Descending. >>> >>> What the hell are those exactly...I figured it -was- the height of the >>> largest glyph in the font. >>> >The term "leading" originally referred to the thickness of the divider >(made of lead) placed between rows of type when setting type by hand. >(Yes, I've done this.) In most computer applications it has been >redefined as the distance from one baseline to the next, which is what >you are looking for. > >Apps like Quark XPress usually let you specify a default leading as a >proportion of the font size. If it's set to add 10%, then a line of 10-pt >type would be positioned 11 pts below the previous line, and 15-pt type >would be placed at 16.5 pts below the last. > > e-e > =J= a y > " Thanks. So , using Al's font into thing or other, if I subtract the ascending, and descending from the result of USR FontHeight, I should have that value/measure called Leading or Linespacing that I am looking for, finally? One reason for this mess is that I can't get PRINT %(x,y) to give the right results in a GWorld. But Drawstring works perfectly. Very funky. However, because I am having to create a GWorld 2-4 times larger than the actual print, making such for a few lines of type could get out of hand at say 96 point results (( 4*96*number of lines) * ( Stringlength of longest sentence)) So I will nab each line of the entry edit field, and apply in some manner. I guess. I think I am overambitious in this text feature. But it works ok for a single line so far. Smooth looking. r c