Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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landscape page quirk in portrait layout
Your suggestion worked. THANKS!
"Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote:
Word is much more likely to do this if it thinks you're going to duplex (if
you have chosen Mirror Margins, say, or enabled "Different odd and even"
headers and footers). It does it to accommodate the printer, which doesn't
like to print landscape on the back of portrait or vice versa. You *may* be
able to enforce your choice, however. With the insertion point in the
section that begins with an Odd Page break, go to the Layout tab of Page
Setup and select "New page" for the section start type.
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so
all may benefit.
"cayce" wrote in message
...
I used section breaks to add two landscape pages in two different spots in
a
portrait document. The first landscape one went in fine; the second one
had a
quirk. The document layout that I am using is to print on one side; there
is
no defining of odd/even pages. When I added the section breaks for the
second
landscape page, it added the breaks as odd page, even though that is not
what
I specified. I simply chose section break, next page.
I noticed the 1st landscape page I added happened to fall on an odd page.
The second landscape page however, ended up on an even page. Word kept
inserting a blank portrait page, with a page numbe on it, and making the
subsequent page the landscape one.
Since I could not figure out what was forcing the added page, I reflowed
the
text in front of the landscape page so that the added page wasn't blank.
Has anyone else run into this and know why and how to eleimate the odd
page
section break I didn't even choose?
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