In Illustrator, you can align text to an object by using the Align property. The Align property is a three-parameter property that allows you to specify how the text should be aligned. The first parameter is the alignment of the text against the object. You can use one of three alignment options: left, right, or center. The left alignment option aligns the text to the left side of the object. The right alignment optionaligns the text to the right side of the object. The center alignment optionaligns all text to one point on the object. The second parameter is how much space each letter should take up in relation to other letters in the document. You can use a number between 1 and 100, or you can use a percentage value (100% means all letters will take up 100% of space). If you use a percentage value, Illustrator will adjust how much space each letter takes up in relation to other letters according to that value. The third parameter is whether or not you want Illustrator to add a line break after each letter in the text. If you don’t want Illustrator to add a line break after each letter, then you must set this parameter to false. If you do want Illustrator to add a line break after each letter, then you must set this parameter to true.