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Place your cursor between a chapter name and the page number in your table of contents. The pink arrow in the picture shows the selection for dots. I also tend to use a thin space of some sort on either side of the tabs in my forms to keep the line a bit separated from the text on either side (don't add the underline to the spaces). In the 'Leader' area, select the choice for dots or lines, whichever you prefer. I did use the information you wrote with my word perfect program but can't seem to find it in Word. On the left tab and the end tab - no sign of the dot leader. You could use, I think the GREP string to pick up any tab or right indent tab (I love using Right indent tabs in forms), and apply the underline style. I work in Word 2007 and can't find the format heading. By creating a character style that does nothing but turn on underline (and you can customize the weight and position, as well as the stroke style for the underline), then applying that style to the tabs in your form you automatically get a line at each tab you enter, and it adjusts as the tab position and surrounding text are changed.ĭaniel suggested using a Nested style, but I suspect if your forms are like mine it's ahrd to predict the number of tabs in a paragraph, so a GREP style might work better. ParametersItemLedgerEntryManItemNoCaption.Value & StrDup(100,'. Im using the following in the textbox expression, but the 'leader dots' gets pushed to the next line, and thus is not visible.


and have font attributes, so evn though they are invisibile they can be underlined. Im trying to add leader dots to some captions in a 2017 RDLC report like the leader dots property in Classic reports. I think Daniel may have led you a bit astray by naming the style "underscore" since it has nothing to do with an underscore character.
