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#1
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How do you define strikthrough color?
Typically black strikethough. Would like red strikethroughs. Thank you!
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#2
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How do you define strikthrough color?
Strikethrough is part of the character, so it won't be a different
color from the rest of the character. You could use the drawing tool to make a straight line and position it over the words to be struck through, but keeping it aligned with them would be tricky. On Mar 9, 9:33*am, MST wrote: Typically black strikethough. Would like red strikethroughs. *Thank you! |
#3
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
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How do you define strikthrough color?
Strikethrough is part of the character, so it won't be a different
color from the rest of the character. You could use the drawing tool to make a straight line and position it over the words to be struck through, but keeping it aligned with them would be tricky. On Mar 9, 9:33*am, MST wrote: Typically black strikethough. Would like red strikethroughs. *Thank you! |
#4
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How do you define strikthrough color?
This isn't something you can do in any kind of general way.
In specific cases, you can use overstriking (either with an EQ field, or an Advance field) to overlay a coloured strikethrough. This avoids most of the positioning issues but comes a bit unstuck at line breaks. -- Enjoy, Tony www.WordArticles.com "Peter T. Daniels" wrote in message ... Strikethrough is part of the character, so it won't be a different color from the rest of the character. You could use the drawing tool to make a straight line and position it over the words to be struck through, but keeping it aligned with them would be tricky. On Mar 9, 9:33 am, MST wrote: Typically black strikethough. Would like red strikethroughs. Thank you! |
#5
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
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How do you define strikthrough color?
This isn't something you can do in any kind of general way.
In specific cases, you can use overstriking (either with an EQ field, or an Advance field) to overlay a coloured strikethrough. This avoids most of the positioning issues but comes a bit unstuck at line breaks. -- Enjoy, Tony www.WordArticles.com "Peter T. Daniels" wrote in message ... Strikethrough is part of the character, so it won't be a different color from the rest of the character. You could use the drawing tool to make a straight line and position it over the words to be struck through, but keeping it aligned with them would be tricky. On Mar 9, 9:33 am, MST wrote: Typically black strikethough. Would like red strikethroughs. Thank you! |
#6
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How do you define strikthrough color?
For more on the EQ field approach, see
http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Overbar.htm. If the goal is to strikethrough multiple letters, say an entire word, it would help if you were using a monospaced font. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Tony Jollans" My forename at my surname dot com wrote in message ... This isn't something you can do in any kind of general way. In specific cases, you can use overstriking (either with an EQ field, or an Advance field) to overlay a coloured strikethrough. This avoids most of the positioning issues but comes a bit unstuck at line breaks. -- Enjoy, Tony www.WordArticles.com "Peter T. Daniels" wrote in message ... Strikethrough is part of the character, so it won't be a different color from the rest of the character. You could use the drawing tool to make a straight line and position it over the words to be struck through, but keeping it aligned with them would be tricky. On Mar 9, 9:33 am, MST wrote: Typically black strikethough. Would like red strikethroughs. Thank you! |
#7
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Quote:
Hope this helps. |
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