here is the text of this article.
Takeaway: You can waste a lot of time trying to get a document to look
right. These power user tricks will help speed your formatting chores.

Formatting improves the readability of your documents and often
provides visual clues to the document’s purpose. It’s an important
part of most every document and users often spend a great deal of time
applying formats. These tips will help you work more efficiently and
judicially when applying formats.

1: Copy defaults
When copying content from another source, even another Word document,
Word retains the source formatting by default. You can eliminate
subsequent formatting by applying the destination document’s default
style during the copy process as follows:

1.Copy the content from the source to the Clipboard using [Ctrl]+C (or
some other route).
2.In the destination document, position the cursor and then click the
Home tab (in Ribbon versions).
3.In the Clipboard group, choose the Keep Text Only option shown in
Figure A from the Paste drop-down. In Word 2003, choose the Keep Text
Only option from the Paste Options (smart tag) drop-down after pasting
the content.
Figure A


The Keep Text Only option applies the destination document’s default
style to copied content.
Changing the default, as follows might be more efficient:

1.Click the File tab and choose Options (under Help). In Word 2007,
click the Office button and then click Word Options. Choose Advanced
in the left pane.
2.In the Cut, Copy, and Paste section, choose the appropriate option.
For example, you might want to retain source formatting when copying
from other Word documents, but not Web sites.
3.Click OK.
In Word 2003, choose Options from the Tools menu and click the Edit
tab. You can uncheck the Smart Cut And Paste option or click the
Settings button to customize the feature.

2: Insert section breaks
Dividing a document into sections lets you customize formats for a
section’s content and purpose. For instance, you might want a single
page to be in landscape in the middle of a portrait document. Or you
might want the header text or page numbering scheme to change for
several pages. Using sections, you can apply different formatting as
needed.

To insert a section break, click the Page Layout tab and choose a
Breaks option in the Page Setup group:

•Next Page: Starts the new section on the next page.
•Continuous: Starts the new section on the same page.
•Even Page: Starts the new section on the next even-numbered page.
•Odd Page: Starts the new section on the next odd-numbered page.
In Word 2003, choose Break from the Insert menu.

Choosing Next Page creates a problem because Word also inserts a page
break. If you don’t want a page break, choose Continuous.

For quicker formatting, copy section breaks when formats are identical
or similar. Then, tweak as necessary rather than starting from scratch
each time. Figure B shows a selected section marker after enabling
Show/Hide in the Paragraph group (on the Home tab; in Word 2003, it’s
on the Standard toolbar). To delete a section, select its code and
press [Delete].

Figure B


Display formatting codes to select a section break.
3: Keep it together
To keep two or more words together on the same line, insert a
nonbreaking space character between them by pressing
[Ctrl]+[Shift]+[Spacebar] instead of inserting a regular space
character. The space will look the same, but Word will keep the two
words on the same line.

A nonbreaking hyphen works the same as a nonbreaking space but with
hyphenated words. If you don’t want Word to wrap at a hyphen
character, enter a nonbreaking hyphen by pressing [Ctrl]+[Shift]+[-].
When the hyphenated word reaches the right margin, Word will wrap the
entire word to the next line if necessary rather than breaking at the
hyphen.

4: Format a list
Formatting just the number component in a numbered list is a bit
tricky. You usually end up formatting the entire item or list, unless
you know this simple trick:

1.On the Home tab, click Show/Hide in the Paragraph group. In Word
2003, click Show/Hide on the Formatting toolbar.
2.Select only the Paragraph mark at the end of the line.
3.With the paragraph mark selected, apply formats. As you can see in
Figure C, only the 2 changed color because we selected only the
paragraph mark for that item.
Figure C


Selecting the paragraph mark is the key to formatting only the item’s number.
To format more than one number, but not all of them, hold down the
[Ctrl] key while selecting markers. To format all of the numbers in
the list, without changing the format of the actual text, click any
number in the list to highlight all of the numbers. Word will extend
the format to new items. Formats applied to the entire list will take
precedence over formats applied via the paragraph marker.

5: Remove formats
Removing formats isn’t hard, but there’s more than one way to get the
job done. When you want to remove a single format, you probably select
the text and click the appropriate option; most of them work as
toggles. You might display the Format dialog and uncheck options when
you need to delete more than one format.

If you want to strip all of the formatting, there’s a quicker method:
Select the text and press [Ctrl]+[Spacebar]. This shortcut removes all
the character formatting except what’s defined by the underlying
style. To remove just the paragraph formats, press [Ctrl]+Q.

6: Keep styles from updating
Word lets you update a style when you add formatting to text. This
behavior can be troublesome if users don’t understand it, so you might
want to disable it as follows:

1.Click the Home tab.
2.Launch the Styles dialog. In Word 2003, click the Styles And
Formatting tool on the Formatting toolbar.
3.Find the style.
4.Choose Modify from the style’s drop-down or right-click the style.
5.Uncheck the Automatically Update option shown in Figure D. (This
option isn’t available with Word’s default style, Normal.)
Figure D


Disable a style’s automatic updating behavior to protect styles.
By default, Word doesn’t set this option for built-in styles, but
users often accidentally enable the feature. Don’t enable this
behavior when basing a new style on an existing style or creating a
new one unless you have a specific reason to do so.

7: Adjust the default line spacing
Word 2007 and 2010 use a 1.15 line spacing setting. That’s great if
you publish a lot of content to the Web. If not, you can change the
default to 1 as follows:

1.Click the Home tab.
2.Right-click Normal in the Styles Quick gallery and choose Modify.
3.Choose Paragraph from the Format list.
4.In the Spacing section, change the At setting from 1.15 to 1, as
shown in Figure E.
5.Click OK.
6.Check the New Documents Based On This Template option. If you don’t
want to change the template, skip this step.
7.Click OK.
Figure E


Reset the default Line Spacing option to 1.
8: Eliminate extra paragraph spacing
Another change to the latest versions is the increased spacing between
paragraphs. It’s not a blank line that you could easily delete. If you
don’t like that much space, you can modify it as follows:

1.Click the Home tab.
2.Click the Paragraph group’s dialog launcher (the small arrow in the
lower-right corner).
3.Check the Don’t Add Space Between Paragraphs Of The Same Style option.
4.Click Set As Default, as shown in Figure F.
5.Click OK.
Figure F


Use this setting to reduce extra white space between paragraphs.
9: Save formatted text as AutoCorrect entries
AutoCorrect reduces data entry and corrects typos, but it can also
apply formatting. Simply save the appropriately formatted text as an
AutoCorrect entry, as follows:

1.Enter and format the text. For instance, enter Backyard Wilderness
and italicize it as a title.
2.Select the formatted text.
3.Click the File menu, choose Options, and then click Proofing in the
left pane. In Word 2007, click the Office button, click Word Options,
and then choose Proofing in the left pane. In Word 2003, choose
AutoCorrect Options from the Tools menu.
4.Click the AutoCorrect Options button in the AutoCorrect Options
section. (Skip this step in Word 2003.)
5.Word will fill the With control with the selected (and formatted) title.
6.Click the Formatted Text option.
7.Enter bw in the Replace control, as shown in Figure G.
8.Click Add.
9.Click OK twice (just once in Word 2003).
Figure G


To insert the formatted title, type bw.
10: Use Find And Replace to change formatting
You probably use Word’s Find And Replace feature to replace
characters, but you can use it to change formatting. For example, you
might want to change all instances of bold to italics, as follows:

1.Press [Ctrl]+H.
2.Click the Find What control and click More.
3.From the Format drop-down, choose Font.
4.Select Bold in the Font Style list and click OK.
5.Click the Replace With control and click More.
6.From the Format drop-down, choose Font.
7.Select Italics in the Font Style list and click OK. As you can see
in Figure H, Word displays the specified formats under both controls.
8.Click Replace All.
Figure H


Replace one format with another using the Replace option.
You can use Replace to remove an unwanted format by leaving the
Replace With control empty. Or you can quickly format all occurrences
of the same text by entering that text in the Find control. For more
ways to use these options, see 10 cool ways to get more from Word’s
Find and Replace feature.

11: Eliminate sticky borders
If you type three hyphens and press [Enter], Word will replace them
with a solid line that extends from the left to the right margin.
Sometimes this line sticks to the text or the bottom of the page no
matter what you do to try to delete it. This happens when you enter
the three hyphens directly under text; Word attaches the border as a
paragraph format.

To quickly remove this sticky border, click inside the paragraph and
choose No Border, as shown in Figure I, from the Border drop-down in
the Paragraph group. In Word 2003, this option’s on the Formatting
toolbar.

Figure I


You can quickly remove a sticky border.


On 4/9/13, Vinita <[email protected]> wrote:
> I am also having a message page not found.
> Thanks
> With Regards
> Vinita Jajodiya
> -----Original message-----
> From: Mahesh S. Panicker
> Sent:  08/04/2013, 7:23  pm
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [AI] 10+ advanced formatting tips for Word users
>
>
> I am getting a 404 error when clicking the given link.
> Could you kindly paste the article?
> Thanks,
>
> On 4/8/13, Prashant Ranjan Verma <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Very useful article. Contains many handy tricks
>> http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/10things/10-advanced-formatting-tips-for-wo
>> rd-users/3658?tag=nl.e101&s_cid=e101&ttag=e101
>>
>>
>> The BEST Way to Read and Publish: http://www.daisy.org/get-involved
>>
>>
>> Register at the dedicated AccessIndia list for discussing accessibility
>> of
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>
>
> --
> Mahesh S. Panicker
> Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science,
> Lady Shri Ram College, Lajpat Nagar
> New Delhi 110024
>
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