And managed to get a different subject text? Good trick!
If ^t is not being recognised then there are no tabs in your document.
Chances are that you have a setting in autoformat as you type, to define
styles based on your formatting. In which case they are indents. Verify by
pressing CTRL+* of click the ¶ button on the toolbar or look at the ruler
with the cursor in an indented para. That being the case, use the replace
function to replace the indented style with a non-indented style. See also
http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/TameAutoFormat.htm
--
Graham Mayor - Word MVP
My web site
www.gmayor.com
Word MVP web site
http://word.mvps.org
unity22 wrote:
Sorry, Doug. I'm a newbie and I probably hit the wrong button twice.
"Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote:
And I now see that your previous identical question was correctly
answered by fellow MVP Jay Freedman 1 hour and fifty minutes before
you repeated the question.
--
Hope this helps.
Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my
services on a paid consulting basis.
Doug Robbins - Word MVP
"unity22" wrote in message
...
I am writring a dictionary and have used a tab at the beginning of
each entry to distinguish it from a heading.
However now I wish to get rid of the tabs and I have tried doing it
by using
the "replace" function (control H), to replace a tab with nothing.
But I cannot find a function on "replace" for tabs.
Can anyone tell me how to get rid of tabs without manually deleting
each one?
Thanks,
unity 22