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Suzanne S. Barnhill Suzanne S. Barnhill is offline
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Default Extraneous vertical bars printing

I actually have some applications for it. You can use it to create the
appearance of a table without requiring the structure of one. This is
convenient for a printed document (such as the Rotary club attendance roll
that I use it for) because adding and removing "rows" is a matter of adding
and deleting paragraphs rather than dealing with table structure.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA

"grammatim" wrote in message
...
Where "bar tab" doesn't refer to your credit account at the tavern,
but to a vertical line inserted with a tab stop. (I can't think of any
reason to use such a thing -- must be left over from a very long time
ago.)

On Mar 18, 5:49 pm, "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote:
I was suggesting that the lines might be change lines or bar tabs. Upon
reflection, however, I don't think they could be bar tabs.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA

"hummerman93" wrote in message

...



I'm sorry, but I do not understand your post.
--
Ross


"Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote:


Change bar? Bar tab?


--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA


"hummerman93" wrote in message
...
Using Word 2003, updated, something new is happening.
When I print a document (any document), about 1/4 inch from the right
edge
of the paper is a short, double vertical bar. It appears only when
the
text
line is not blank. It is as tall as the text in the adjacent line.
This
does
not happen when printing from Excel, IE, etc., only in Word.


What could be going on here?
--
Ross-