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The KMail Welcome Screen
KMail is the email component of Kontact, the integrated personal information manager of KDE.
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Image map:

KWord
Although a word processor, KWord is frame-based, so can also perform light layout duties, similar to a desktop publishing application.
- a huge collection of calendars with a broad range of topics

kwrite ftp://ftp.kde.org/pub/kde/Welcome.msg
“for images that contain substantial areas of constant color a linear 
histogram will often be dominated by a single bar. In this case a logarithmic
histogram will often be more useful.”
Note
Tip
Warning


 See footnote



Support for this application can be found from the project's home page


Information
This page refers to KWord 1.5. It needs to be revised and updated to KWord from KOffice2. Please remove this notice when you are satisfied that it is correct and complete for KOffice2


How to Unlock your Widgets
How to Unlock your Widgets
"And on the right..."
Amarok 2 has the most configurable playlist of any music player in existence. While most offer a columnar layout as default and perhaps a few other fixed views for the playlist, Amarok2 puts the power in your hands to shape the playlist any way you see fit. To start you off, there are three example playlist layouts that you can use as starting points to create the layout that fits your flow the best.

A Third Layout Project - a Photo Album Page

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Third Layout Project
In our third Layout Tutorial you will again use your own pictures and text

In this lesson you will revise the steps of the first and second tutorials:

  • add text boxes and adjust their size and position
  • format text
  • add illustrations
  • adjust their size and position

You will create a page suitable for use as a photo album page, during which we will examine text runaround and text-flow.

Plenty of white space is advisable in a photo album page, but if your margins are too large you will find that either the pictures or text suffer from lack of space. We will start by increasing the margins on our page. Use the menu entries Format > Page Layout. Set the margins to 25mm all round, then check Apply to Document.

First, place three or four photos on your page, resize them and move them until you feel you have a good balance. Now create a text frame,alongside your first picture, roughly filling the available space. In Properties, give it a recognisable name, then in the Options tab, set "Do not show the extra text". Close the properties box, and select the Text tool. The text tool options appear at the lower right of the page. Set the font style and size that you want, then either type directly into the box, or paste in ready-made text. For a photo album you probably need a much larger text style that you would use for most documents.

If your text overflows the area selected it will not be visible (due to the setting we just made). Now's the time to create a new text box alongside the second picture. Again, fill the available space. The Connect Text Frames options page will pop up. Click on the named frame you earlier created.