Use the tool and draw a comment. Use the Properties Bar (Ctrl + E) to display and set the features. Once a comment is configured as you like, right-click and choose Make Properties Default. From then on, your comment tool uses the same appearance.
I know you can do this for the italics, but not for subscript. If you are writing a comment, it doesn't identify baseline/super/sub script. If what you are doing is using subscript within a comment, select the text after you have written a comment, and then you can make some changes in the Properties, but again you won't be able to modify baseline. Sorry.
donna.
A prolific author and writer of many Acrobat books, as well as books on graphic and Web design software.
Donna lives on a lakeshore in central Canada, where all manner of wildlife from muskrats to coyotes come to call.
Use the tool and draw a comment. Use the Properties Bar (Ctrl + E) to display and set the features. Once a comment is configured as you like, right-click and choose Make Properties Default. From then on, your comment tool uses the same appearance.
I know you can do this for the italics, but not for subscript. If you are writing a comment, it doesn't identify baseline/super/sub script. If what you are doing is using subscript within a comment, select the text after you have written a comment, and then you can make some changes in the Properties, but again you won't be able to modify baseline. Sorry.
donna.
A prolific author and writer of many Acrobat books, as well as books on graphic and Web design software.
Donna lives on a lakeshore in central Canada, where all manner of wildlife from muskrats to coyotes come to call.