On Wed, 04 Jun 2014 21:19:51 -0000, Colleen McCartin 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Okay, I'll try. Let's start from the email side.  Normally I open an email
to compose, write it, and then go to my file that is an open office doc and
cut and paste the "business signature" (Living Waters......) to emails that
it is appropriate.

Now, I went into the doc and made some changes, then cut and pasted it as I
normally do, but the spacing changed. I tried to delete possible
formatting, etc but it still came up with the same wide spacing.

So, I thought if I inserted a frame (text box) on an open office doc then
cut and pasted the email sig (text) from the original doc into the frame,
that I could then cut and paste it into the email and all format would stay
the same because it is in the frame.

So once the frame had the text pasted in it, fonts sizes etc (see the
attached sent previously), I tried to copy the frame to paste onto the
email as my sig.

i think i have an idea. when you copy something from one document to another, 
all the attributes of that text are also copied, including manual formatting 
(font, size, line spacing etc) and that applied by means of the styles. 
however, if a style in the source document has the same name as one in the 
destination document, and if the copied text is formatted with that style, then 
it is not the style which is copied but only its name, whereas the attributes 
associated with the style are taken from the destination document's style 
having that name.

suppose you have some text in a document, to which the paragraph style 
'default' is applied, and that style has single line spacing. in another 
document there also exists the paragraph style 'default', but it has double 
line spacing. when you copy the text from the first document to the second one, 
it switches from the first document's 'default' style to the second document's 
one and therefore becomes double spaced.

that seems to be your case. to fix it, you should apply some style other than 
'default' to your frame. alternatively, you may apply another style to the 
destination text or remove expanded spacing from the destination's 'default' 
and set it manually where necessary.

note that if you used some custom style instead of 'default', it would be 
enough to simply rename it, while renaming automatic styles, such as 'default', 
is not allowed. that is a case against the use of the automatic styles.

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