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Change the case of typeThe All Caps or Small Caps commands change the appearance of text, but not the text itself. Conversely, the Change Case command changes the case setting of selected text. This distinction is important when searching or spell-checking text. For example, suppose you type “spiders” in your document and apply All Caps to the word. Using Find/Change (with Case Sensitive selected) to search for “SPIDERS” will not find the instance of “spiders” to which All Caps was applied. To improve search and spell-check results, use the Change Case command rather than All Caps. Change text to All Caps or Small CapsInDesign can automatically change the case of selected text. When you format text as small caps, InDesign automatically uses the small-cap characters designed as part of the font, if available. Otherwise, InDesign synthesizes the small caps using scaled-down versions of the regular capital letters. The size of synthesized small caps is set in the Type Preferences dialog box. ![]() Before (top) and after (bottom) setting BC and AD in small
caps to complement old-style numerals and surrounding text If you select All Caps or Small Caps in an OpenType font, InDesign creates more elegant type. If you’re using an OpenType font, you can also choose All Small Caps from the Character panel menu or the Control panel. (See Apply OpenType font attributes.)
Specify the size for small caps
Change capitalization
Note: The Sentence Case command assumes that the period (.),
exclamation point (!), and question mark (?) characters
mark the ends of sentences. Applying Sentence Case may cause unexpected
case changes when these characters are used in other ways, as in
abbreviations, file names, or Internet URLs. In addition, proper names
may become lowercase when they should be uppercase.
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