Quickly fix widows in InDesign By Chris Johnson

You can find and fix all the widows in your Adobe InDesign documents just by using InDesign’s Find/Change. Switch to GREP mode and use this regular expression in the Find what field:

(\b\w+?\b) (\b\S{1,6}?\b[.!?]\r)

And put this in the Change to field:

$1~S$2

When you’re done, this is what the dialog box should look like:

What’s a widow and why should I care?

A widow is a short word by itself on the last line of a paragraph. Widows can adversely affect the readability of your documents by creating awkward white space between paragraphs. Here’s an example:

Finding and getting rid of widows in your files can take a long time, especially with lots of content. Automating the process can save time and reduce the likelihood you’ll overlook a widow.

So what does this do exactly?

This regular expression will find the last two words of a paragraph and replace the normal space between them with a non-breaking space. Non-breaking spaces, as you might have guessed, tell InDesign not to automatically break the line between the words. So, now your lonely word will have a neighbor on the last line. If the last word wasn’t by itself, the non-breaking space will just leave things as they were.

Here’s what the above example would look like after being run through the Find/Change:

The regular expression will also only match words that are up six characters or less and have punctuation (.!?) after them. Longer words should look fine on a line by themselves. It checks for punctuation because you may not want to worry about widows in text that isn’t made up of proper sentences, like a headline or other large display type.

Tip of the hat to Jarod Sutphin for giving me the idea to figure this out.