|
In this occasion we will give you some
tricks for Microsoft Word.
Paste Special –
When you are in a Word document and pasting something
you have copied from another document, or from
a web page or other source, more often than not
you want the formatting to match the destination
document rather than the source. From the Edit
menu, use Paste Special instead of Paste. The
Paste Special window that opens gives you several
options. Choose Unformatted Text to have your
pasted content take on the formatting of the paragraph
it’s pasted into. If you have Word 2002
(in Office XP), pasting is even more flexible.
In this case the choice you want is called Match
Destination Formatting.
Stop Auto This
‘n That – Sometimes Word is
a little too helpful. For instance, if you write
about PCs, Word obligingly changes to Pcs because
it knows only the first letter of a word should
be capitalized. Here’s another example –
whenever you type in a URL or e-mail address,
Word automatically turns it in to a hyperlink,
in blue and neatly underlined. That may sometimes
be useful if your content is going on-line, but
otherwise it’s just a nuisance. To handle
either of these conditions, pull down the Format
menu and select AutoFormat, then click the Options
button.
On the AutoCorrect tab, unclick the box to Correct
TWo INitial CApitals. So this takes care of changing
PCs to Pcs. On the AutoFormat tab, uncheck the
box that says Internet and Network Paths with
Hyperlinks to disable the automatic hyperlink.
While you are here, look over the various tabs
and see all of the other ‘conveniences’
you can disable.
Now, what if somebody sends you a document for
editing and they didn’t know these tricks?
Consequently every URL in the document is now
a hot link and if you click on one, Word will
open your browser and away you go. What if the
URL was misspelled and needs to be corrected?
Talk about frustrating! Fortunately, if you right-click
the hyperlink and select Hyperlink from the pop-up
menu, you can then edit the link, or change it
back to regular text by selecting Remove Hyperlink.
Quick-change –
How often have you opened a document only to find
it was something obsolete, or the filename that
you thought was so clever last year now causes
you to confuse it with something else? Well, you
don’t have to leave Word and go to My Computer
to delete or rename the file. First close the
file, since you can’t take these actions
on an open file. Next, click the Open icon on
Word’s toolbar again. When the Open box
appears this time, highlight the file and right-click.
The pop-up menu will let you do a wide selection
of actions on that file, including delete or rename.
Screen
Tips – Most of the commands in Word
have a keyboard shortcut, and there are many good
thick manuals to tell you what they are. Or, you
can learn them faster by turning on Screen Tips,
which will show you the keyboard counterpart each
time you exercise a command from the toolbar.
Go to Tools, Customize. On the Options tab, check
the boxes for Show Screen Tips on Toolbars and
Show Shortcut Keys in Screen Tips. Both boxes
must be checked to make this work.
File List –
You probably know that the File menu has a list
of the last four documents you worked on, which
lets you open one of them with a quick mouse click
instead of having to track it down. If just four
doesn’t do it for you, go to Tools, Options,
and on the General Tab is an item called the Recently
Used File List where you can select the number
of entries to show, up to a maximum of nine. Word
won’t immediately show them all, but it
will lengthen the list by one entry each time
you modify another document, until it reaches
the limit you set. After that, it will knock the
oldest entry off the list whenever it adds a new
one.
Work List – Here’s
another scenario. Maybe you work with just a few
Word documents again and again, but in between
you open other documents. Next time you want one
of your favorites, it’s been bumped off
the list by these interlopers. What you really
need is a list of those few documents that you
use repeatedly. This is called a Work List, and
you can create one rather easily. Go to Tools,
Customize and select the Commands tab. Click on
Built-In menus, and then scroll the list on the
right until you find Work. Highlight this and
drag it to the Word menu bar. You now have a new
menu called Work.
To add a document to this menu,
first open the document you wish to add. While
you are in that document, pull down the Work menu
and select Add to Work Menu. Your document will
now be added to the list. Thereafter, anytime
you are in Word and want to open that particular
document, pull down the Work menu and click on
the document name. To delete a document from the
Work list, click Ctrl-Alt-Hyphen, which will change
the mouse pointer to a large hyphen. Pull down
the Work menu, and click the item you wish to
remove.
This Ctrl-Alt-Hyphen procedure,
by the way, can be used to delete any command
on any menu. Two tips within a tip – First,
you must use the hyphen that shares a key with
the underline. Don’t use the minus sign
from the number keypad. Second, if you Ctrl-Alt
Hyphen and then change your mind before deleting
any menu commands, just hit the Escape key.
|