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Use guides
Guides help
you align text and graphic objects. You can create ruler guides (straight
vertical or horizontal lines) and guide objects (vector
objects that you convert to guides). Like the grid, guides do not
print.
You can choose between two guide styles—dots
and lines—and you can change the color of guides by using either
predefined guide colors or colors you select using a color picker.
By default, guides are unlocked so that you can move, modify, delete,
or revert them, but you can choose to lock them into place.
- To
show or hide guides, choose View > Guides >
Show Guides or View > Guides > Hide Guides.
- To
change guide settings, choose Edit > Preferences >
Guides & Grid (Windows) or Illustrator > Preferences >
Guides & Grid (Mac OS).
- To
lock guides, select View > Guides > Lock
Guides.
Create guides- If the rulers aren’t showing, choose
View > Show Rulers.
- Position
the pointer on the left ruler for a vertical guide or on the top
ruler for a horizontal guide.
- Drag
the guide into position.
You
can also convert vector objects to guides by selecting them and
choosing View > Guides > Make Guides.
 To
make working with multiple guides easier, move them into a separate
layer.
Move, delete, or release guides- If guides are locked, select View >
Guides > Lock Guides.
- Do
any of the following:
Move
the guide by dragging or copying.
Delete
the guide by pressing Backspace (Windows) or Delete (Mac OS),
or by choosing Edit > Cut or Edit > Clear.
Delete
all guides at once by choosing View > Guides >
Clear Guides.
Release
the guide, turning it back into a regular graphic object, by selecting the
guide and choosing View > Guides > Release
Guides.
Snap objects to anchor points and guides- Choose
View > Snap To Point.
- Select
the object you want to move, and position the pointer on the exact point
you want to align with anchor points and guides.
Important: When
snapping to a point, the snapping alignment depends on the position
of the pointer, not the edges of the dragged object.
- Drag
the object to the desired location.
When
the pointer comes within 2 pixels of an anchor point or guide, it
snaps to the point. The pointer changes from a filled arrowhead
to a hollow arrowhead when a snap occurs.
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