My suggestion is forget the scissors. Just set up a line with tab leaders
using dotted lines formatted to a light grey. The first tab (a tab with
dotted leader) draws across to short of the cent then type in 'cut along
here' followed by a second tab leader, right aligned to the margin. So you
end up with something like...
------------------- cut along here ---------------------
Then save this as an AutoText (Quick Parts) item for regular use.
Do we really need scissors symbols to tell us to cut? I expect most people
will fold and tear because they don't have scissors handy.
Terry Farrell
"Matty" wrote in message
...
"Jay Freedman" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 4 May 2008 17:15:33 -0700, "Matty"
wrote:
WinP Pro SP2
MS Office 2003 SP3
How do you create/insert a "cut here line"? I prefer a dashed/dotted
line
with a scissors icon.
Thanks.
Insert either a double-quote character or a # character, and format it in
Wingdings font -- both are scissors, but in different orientations.
Then display the Drawing toolbar. Select the Line tool (next to the
AutoShapes
button) and draw a line near the scissors. Using the other buttons on the
Drawing toolbar, format the line to the color, thickness, and dash style
you
want.
--
Regards,
Jay Freedman
Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org
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so all may benefit.
Thanks.
I thought there would be an option for a ready made line style with a
scissor, like the one in MS Pub (although MS Pub is limited to complete
borders).