I am signed up for all your courses, but sometimes find it challenging to complete the whole course, then of course when I need help and I know you’ve addressed my issue I can’t find it, or it takes me too long and I give up. These short snippets are wonderful and allow me to save them to watch again when I need them. Thank you for all your hard work. I’m an attorney so I like to understand and create my own formatting and you’ve definitely helped me.
Great tips! I needed to repeat a heading column on my document just yesterday! Took your basic course and I highly recommend it to everyone, not just legal professionals. I'm writing a family history and your lessons have made the process so much easier for me. I've used Word forever and never really knew how to use it until I took your course. Love that you keep improving your already fantastic lessons!
I've been using Word since the early '90s as a technical writer, and Deborah's web site and videos have taught me things I'm ashamed I did not know. My only table hack that I can offer is how to move a table row up or down quickly: click anywhere in a row, press Alt+Shift+Up arrow or Down arrow to move the whole row up or down. It's also a great shortcut to use to move paragraphs quickly in a document (but NOT good for moving paragraphs within a table, since the whole row is automatically selected).
I love that! I've been stuck doing the "insert a new row, CTRL-X the row to move, CTRL-V the row into new position, delete the blank row" thing. I did not know this was possible - thanks!
@@DeborahSavadra Happy to share a new trick! That key combo is also terribly useful when rearranging items in bulleted lists. I read somewhere it was introduced with Word's Outline View as a way to 'hoist' sections of the outline. Since each paragraph carries its own outline ranking (usually 1, I think), it works on paragraphs too.When you have a hierarchical bulleted or numbered list, using Alt+Shift Up, Left, Right, and Down arrows is the best and quickest way to order and reorganize the list. And again, keep up your good work! I never really understood the power of using building blocks till I saw your videos and posts on it; it makes my tech writing day job duties much easier.
Deborah I have problem with word document I need you help with it. if possible I can show you and share my screen with you to tell me how to fix it. I would really appreciate it.
Is it possible to apply a macro to tables in Word? I want to automatically have the words that are pasted in the table go to all UPPERCASE then, set the font size and color, align-center left, distribute rows, AutoFit contents, and AutoFit window. I can do all this manually but I haven't had any luck making it a macro.
A macro probably isn't the best choice for doing all this work. If this is a table that has some common characteristics each time (same number of columns, etc.), I'd configure a sample table with all of those characteristics (including forcing the font to UPPERCASE) then save it as a Quick Part in the Tables gallery. It's this technique (legalofficeguru.com/reuseable-footers-quick-parts/) except use the Tables gallery rather than the Footers gallery.
Without using DESIGN, in the LAYOUT tab, → click ‘Repeat Header Rows’ works fine. BUT if click TABLE DESIGN’ → still works ok until select any design. Then, the Repeat Header Rows fails. Want: how to fix this? [Try this at your end with this document to see what happens.]
Well, if you choose a pre-configured table design, then, yes, you'll overwrite the table settings you already had. Try reversing the order of your steps ( _i.e._, choose your table design _first_, THEN set your header row).
Ohhh my word ....I have watch so many UA-cam videos to solve my problem and finally .... yes your video was on point ..thank u "what a relief"
your MS word knowledge is just perfect, please keep posting video like this, this will help lots of people like me to understand MS word
More to come!
I am signed up for all your courses, but sometimes find it challenging to complete the whole course, then of course when I need help and I know you’ve addressed my issue I can’t find it, or it takes me too long and I give up. These short snippets are wonderful and allow me to save them to watch again when I need them.
Thank you for all your hard work. I’m an attorney so I like to understand and create my own formatting and you’ve definitely helped me.
Great tips! I needed to repeat a heading column on my document just yesterday! Took your basic course and I highly recommend it to everyone, not just legal professionals. I'm writing a family history and your lessons have made the process so much easier for me. I've used Word forever and never really knew how to use it until I took your course. Love that you keep improving your already fantastic lessons!
Glad that was helpful!
Your efforts create and share this video is appreciated. The tips are very useful. Thanks
Great video...........Thank you very much Deborah
😀
This is the BEST. Thanks so much for your videos, they are so helpful!!
Glad you like them!
The tips are extremely useful! I can finally avoid tables splitting into 2 pages!
Thanks for this!
Just superb ❤
You saved my life.
Glad that helped!
I've been using Word since the early '90s as a technical writer, and Deborah's web site and videos have taught me things I'm ashamed I did not know. My only table hack that I can offer is how to move a table row up or down quickly: click anywhere in a row, press Alt+Shift+Up arrow or Down arrow to move the whole row up or down. It's also a great shortcut to use to move paragraphs quickly in a document (but NOT good for moving paragraphs within a table, since the whole row is automatically selected).
I love that! I've been stuck doing the "insert a new row, CTRL-X the row to move, CTRL-V the row into new position, delete the blank row" thing. I did not know this was possible - thanks!
@@DeborahSavadra Happy to share a new trick! That key combo is also terribly useful when rearranging items in bulleted lists. I read somewhere it was introduced with Word's Outline View as a way to 'hoist' sections of the outline. Since each paragraph carries its own outline ranking (usually 1, I think), it works on paragraphs too.When you have a hierarchical bulleted or numbered list, using Alt+Shift Up, Left, Right, and Down arrows is the best and quickest way to order and reorganize the list. And again, keep up your good work! I never really understood the power of using building blocks till I saw your videos and posts on it; it makes my tech writing day job duties much easier.
Deborah I have problem with word document I need you help with it. if possible I can show you and share my screen with you to tell me how to fix it. I would really appreciate it.
Is it possible to apply a macro to tables in Word? I want to automatically have the words that are pasted in the table go to all UPPERCASE then, set the font size and color, align-center left, distribute rows, AutoFit contents, and AutoFit window. I can do all this manually but I haven't had any luck making it a macro.
A macro probably isn't the best choice for doing all this work. If this is a table that has some common characteristics each time (same number of columns, etc.), I'd configure a sample table with all of those characteristics (including forcing the font to UPPERCASE) then save it as a Quick Part in the Tables gallery. It's this technique (legalofficeguru.com/reuseable-footers-quick-parts/) except use the Tables gallery rather than the Footers gallery.
How to merge the first four cell into one cell
Without using DESIGN, in the LAYOUT tab, → click ‘Repeat Header Rows’ works fine. BUT if click TABLE DESIGN’ → still works ok until select any design.
Then, the Repeat Header Rows fails. Want: how to fix this? [Try this at your end with this document to see what happens.]
Well, if you choose a pre-configured table design, then, yes, you'll overwrite the table settings you already had. Try reversing the order of your steps ( _i.e._, choose your table design _first_, THEN set your header row).