View Single Post
  #6   Report Post  
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
Beth Melton Beth Melton is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,380
Default Stacking docking windows

I suspect your primary interest was seeing the current style and thought the
Styles combo box designed for the QAT would help but I see that's something
you've already tried.

For your longer style names, perhaps an alias would help?

Please post all follow-up questions to the newsgroup. Requests for
assistance by email cannot be acknowledged.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Beth Melton
Microsoft Office MVP

Coauthor of Word 2007 Inside Out:
http://www.microsoft.com/MSPress/boo...x#AboutTheBook

Word FAQ: http://mvps.org/word
TechTrax eZine: http://mousetrax.com/techtrax/
MVP FAQ site: http://mvps.org/

"Ed Brey" wrote in message
...
An example of when both docking windows would be helpful is dealing with
heading levels. For example, from a new document, if I press
Shift+Alt+Right,
the style Heading 2 is applied. I can tell what the style is from either
the
Quick Styles control or the Styles window. Now, if I press Shift+Alt+Right
again, it becomes difficult to tell that I'm on Heading 3. I'd have to
remember what depth I am at or tell from the font, both of which are
unreliable when working in a complicated document. Otherwise, I have to
manually customize the list of visible styles in the Quick Styles or
Styles
list, but this takes effort and wastes screen real estate on styles that
are
easily keyboard selectable.

The Apply Styles (or Style Inspector) window is convenient because it
always
shows the current style. Adding the Style command to the Quick Access
Toolbar
helps sometimes, but it doesn't appear to be resizable. This makes it work
for headings, but for styles with longer names, it would still be helpful
to
have a way to always be able to see the current style and be able to
select a
new one, but without giving up too much horizontal space.