
| Previous Slide | Next Slide | |
| Slide 1: | Character and Paragraph Formatting |
| Slide 2: | Bullets and Numbered Lists |
| Slide 3: | Headers and Footers |
| Slide 4: | Page and Document Settings |
| Slide 5: | Stylesheet Formatting |
| Slide 6: | Tables |
| Slide 7: | Zooming |
| Slide 8: | Loading from and saving to databases |
| Slide 9: | Images |
| Slide 10: | Hypertext Links |
| Slide 11: | Clipboard Operations |
| Slide 12: | Multi-Level Undo / Redo |
| Slide 13: | Printing and Print Preview |
| Slide 14: | Find and Replace |
| Slide 15: | Line and Character Operations |
| Slide 16: | Control Settings |
| Slide 17: | Marked Text Fields |
| Slide 18: | Toolbars |
| Slide 19: | XML Programming |
| Slide 20: | Text Frames |
| Slide 21: | Document Sections |
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TX Text Control provides a rich set of formatting options for tables, cells and text contained within table cells.
Tables can be inserted into documents or other tables using the integrated dialog box or directly from program code. Frames and shading can be applied to cells and the cell contents can be formatted using any of TX Text Control's formatting options.
Selecting a font face, setting an indent or setting line spacing, for example, for text within a table cell is performed exactly the same as for text elsewhere in a document.
Cells can contain singular words or figures, entire paragraphs, graphics and even tables. Their height and width can be set independently from one another, either from program code or using the integrated dialog box.
Table cells can be accessed in a grid-like manner, enabling developers to fill in their contents from a database and perform calculations on the contents of rows and columns.
Screenshots created with TX Text Control 14.0