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A Relatively Short Demonstration of Wrap Text Functions

In-line with text


The default setting; The image is part of the line of text on which it is inserted, like what’s
shown in this example.:

= water crisis jokes lol

Square
Text flows around the image in a square-like/rectangular manner. For example:

Insanity. n. mental illness of such a severe nature that a person cannot distinguish fantasy from reality, cannot
conduct her/his affairs due to psychosis, or is subject to uncontrollable impulsive behavior.

Insanity is a concept discussed in court to help distinguish guilt from


innocence. It's informed by mental health professionals, but the term
today is primarily legal, not psychological. There's no "insane"
diagnosis listed in the DSM. There's no "nervous breakdown" either,
but that's another blog.

Where did this saying come from? It's attributed to Albert Einstein
(probably not), Benjamin Franklin (probably not), Mark Twain
(probably not) and mystery writer Rita Mae Brown (probably so) who
used it in her novel Sudden Death. It's not clear who said it first, but
according to at least one blogger it's "the dumbest thing a smart
person ever said." The catchy saying has gathered steam in the past
few years (example I, II, III), and regardless of the source, it's gotten a
lot of mileage.
Tight Wrap
It works almost the same as the Square wrap option, except it sets the margins much smaller
and shorter a.k.a. tightening the spaces between the image and the text. Here is one example:

The American Psychological Association (APA) defines anxiety as "an emotion


characterized by feelings of tension, worried thoughts and physical changes like increased
blood pressure."

Knowing the difference between normal feelings of anxiety and an anxiety


disorder requiring medical attention can help a person identify and treat the
condition.

Through the Text


Basicallly the “Tight Wrap 2.0” which is set to be much tighter, but in some cases, you may not
find much difference between them depending on the image used.

To justify my argument, here’s two examples to show how much little difference they have:

Through:

Patrick the Starfish

Seen as a lazy, overweight and dimwitted pink starfish, Patrick lives under a
rock in the underwater city of Bikini Bottom next door to Squidward Tentacles'
moai. His most significant character trait is his lack of common sense, which
sometimes leads him and his best friend, SpongeBob SquarePants, into trouble.
Patrick is unemployed and a self-proclaimed expert in the "art of doing
nothing".

Tight:

Patrick the Starfish

Seen as a lazy, overweight and dimwitted pink starfish, Patrick lives under a
rock in the underwater city of Bikini Bottom next door to Squidward Tentacles'
moai. His most significant character trait is his lack of common sense, which
sometimes leads him and his best friend, SpongeBob SquarePants, into trouble.
Patrick is unemployed and a self-proclaimed expert in the "art of doing
nothing".
Top-and-Bottom Wrap
Text is wrapped ONLY on the top and bottom part of the image, for example:

When your sister left early for school and she forgot her lunch money

So you took it instead because you had a later morning class curfew

Behind Text
It basically places the image behind all text elements. For examp- no wait there’s already one…

In-front of Text
Basically the polar opposite of “Behind text” where it intentionaly places the image over the
text (which is very much rarely used in every Microsoft Office applications.) One good example
for it is this:

“Bro you insane motherfu (you actually thought I was gonna put a swear here huh) !”

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