I have never seen the behavior you're describing. Does this happen
with a particular document or with a set of documents created from the
same template? I suppose it could be a corrupt document or template.
See
http://word.mvps.org/faqs/apperrors/CorruptDoc.htm.
See also the replies posted to your other (similar) question in
microsoft.public.word.tables. Please avoid multi-posting (or at least
indicate that you've asked the same question in another newsgroup,
too).
--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP
"DonD" wrote in message
...
Yes, I can split the merged cell but the row will have too many
columns and
once again requires a rewrite or major cell resizing. The most
bazaar thing
is the cell had 3 lines of text, with a return after the first 2
lines of
text. Somehow these returns changed the single cell into a 3 row
merged cell.
The other bazaar thing is the fact you can't identify which cell is
merged in
word. I ended up copying and pasting a row from the word table into
excel to
see what cell was merged. The only real problem I can see is a
merged cell is
not. If it was merged like "Word Perfect" it would be truly one
cell. The
"Word Perfect" table capabilities in the mid '90 was way ahead of
Word 2003.
10 years behind. Pretty sad.
"Stefan Blom" wrote:
The two cells have been merged (Table | Merge Cells). Place the
cursor
inside them and try the Split Cell command on the Table menu.
--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP
"DonD" wrote in message
...
I have a couple rows in my table that seem to be totally normal
until I
select a table column. Then I get 2 side-by-side cells selected
with
the
otherwise single table column. Are these 2 cells linked? I don't
know why
it's doing this. I can no longer copy and paste a column. I
tried
cutting and
pasteing the row into a new row, but it still does it. It there
anyway to fix
this?