- Text Word Twist Game
- Line Insert In The Text Word For Mac 2011
- Line Insert In The Text Word For Mac 2008
- Line Insert In The Text Word For Mac
- Super Text Word Twist
- Click The Area Where You Type The Text Word
Making a form in Word 2011 for Mac is as simple as choosing appropriate form controls from the Developer tab of the Office 2011 for Mac Ribbon, placing them in your Word document, and then enabling your form by turning protection on. The text input field is the most common form field. You might have filled in thousands of them in your lifetime. Name, address, and phone number are appropriate for text fields.
The text input field is the most common form field. You might have filled in thousands of them in your lifetime. Name, address, and phone number are appropriate for text fields. To add a text input field to a document: In an open Word document, place the insertion point where you want to insert a.
Mar 30, 2016 When I insert a horizontal line (by itself, not around text) in Word I can't change the line from the default color (black). This must be easy but I cannot figure it out. This thread is locked. Note: In recent versions of Word, select the text box, click the Format tab and use the controls at the left side of the ribbon to add a border, change color, add a fill to the background, adjust the transparency and apply effects to the text box. How to overtype text in Word Authored by: mlopes on Feb 09, '07 08:27:19AM In the PC the OVR in the Word used to stand for overwrite, maybe that would help in your searchs.
To add a text input field to a document:
- In an open Word document, place the insertion point where you want to insert a text form field.
- Click the Text Box Field button on the Developer tab of the Ribbon.A gray box (the form field) appears in your document at the insertion cursor position, and the fun begins.
- Click the gray box to select it and then click the Options button on the Ribbon.
Text Word Twist Game
Double-clicking a form control (while the form is not protected) displays the Options dialog for that form control.
The Text Form Field Options dialog is devilishly simple, yet brilliant. When you click the Type pop-up menu and choose a text field type, the rest of the Text Form Field Options dialog changes to offer appropriate choices based on your selection. Here are the six types of text form fields from which to choose:
- Regular Text: Word displays whatever is typed.
- Number: Numbers can be formatted and used in calculations.
- Date: Dates can be formatted.
- Current Date: Displays the current date in your form.
- Current Time: Displays the current time in your form.
- Calculation: Calculates values based on entries made in numeric fields.
The Text Form Field Options dialog allows these options for Regular Text:
- Type: Choose a field type as described in the previous paragraph.
- Maximum Length: Specify the number of characters allowed in the field.
- Default Text: This text appears as a prompt in the field.
- Text Format: Choose a text formatting option from the pop-up menu.
- Run Macro On: If macros are available to this document, you can choose one to be triggered as the form field is clicked into or exited.
- Field Settings: These settings are available:
- Bookmark:Add a bookmark name to your form field.
- Calculate on Exit: If you have calculated fields, select this check box to have them calculate when exiting the form field.
- Fill-In Enabled: Select this check box so your field can be typed in.
- Add Help Text button: This opens the Form Field Help Text dialog that enables you to add a prompt or explanatory text about the form field. This help text appears in the status bar at the bottom of the document window, or you can have it appear when the user presses the Help button on the keyboard (but not from the Help option you see when you right-click or Control-click the field).
Work with form fields and set their options while the form is unprotected (or unlocked). You have to protect (or lock) a form before you can fill in the form fields.
Besides entering text, selecting text is probably the most common task for most Word users. Almost every task begins by selecting something. Perhaps that's why there are so many ways to select text. The following list includes the methods I use. There are more - I left off a few because I've listed easier methods. If you have a favorite that I haven't listed, please share it with us.
Click and drag
Line Insert In The Text Word For Mac 2011
Probably the most intuitive and common way to select text is to click and drag the mouse in any direction.
[Shift]+arrow
To move one character or one line at a time, hold down the [Shift] key while pressing the right and left arrow keys and the up and down arrow keys, respectively.
[Shift]+[Home] | [End]
Pressing [Shift] + [Home] selects everything from the insertion point to the left margin in the current line. Similarly, [Shift]+[End] selects everything from the insert point to the last character to the right.
Double-click
To select the current word, double-click it. Word will select to the left and right of the cursor, until it encounters a space character.
Triple-click
A triple-click selects the current paragraph.
Line Insert In The Text Word For Mac 2008
Margin+click
To select an entire line, move the cursor into the left margin. When you see the insertion pointer turn into an arrow pointer, click. Doing so will select the current line. You can also press [Home]+[Shift]+[End], but doing so is a bit awkward.
Margin+click and drag
This selection method is similar to the previous one. If you drag while holding down the mouse, Word will select multiple lines, even paragraphs. Word will stop selecting when you stop dragging.
[Ctrl]+a
Line Insert In The Text Word For Mac
Pressing [Ctrl]+a selects the entire document.
[Ctrl]+click
To select a sentence (not just a line), hold down [Ctrl] and click any place within the sentence.
![Twist Twist](/uploads/1/2/6/0/126005267/140582260.jpg)
Super Text Word Twist
Click+[Shift]+click
To select a block of text, click at one end of the block. Then, hold down the [Shift] key and click a second time at the opposite end of the block.
[Alt]+drag
This combination selects a vertical block. While holding down [Alt], click and drag up or down. (You must press [Alt] first.)
Selection+[Ctrl]+selection
To select two noncontiguous blocks of text, select the first bit of text. Then, hold down [Ctrl] while you select the next, and the next, and the next - use it to select two or several non-contiguous areas. (I probably use this one more than any other besides click and drag - it's great for applying the same format to several spots.)
[Ctrl]+[Shift]+[Right arrow] | [Left arrow]
Use this combination to select from the current position to the right or left of the current word, depending on whether you press the right or left arrow, respectively.
[Ctrl]+[Shift]+[Up arrow] | [Down arrow]
This combination selects from the current position to the beginning or ending of the current paragraph, depending on whether you press the up or down arrow, respectively.
[Alt]+[Ctrl]+[Shift]+[Page Up] | [Page Down]
Click The Area Where You Type The Text Word
This is another awkward keystroke combination that selects from the current insertion point to the beginning or the ending of the current window (what you see on the screen), respectively. This one's awkward enough that I'd probably use a quick click and drag instead.