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#1
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Word formating
Hello,
how to make one word in the whole text in bold, using MS Word 2003? Thanks in advance. |
#2
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Word formating
Select the Word - CTRL+B
-- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org "zeeziuke" wrote in message ... Hello, how to make one word in the whole text in bold, using MS Word 2003? Thanks in advance. |
#3
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Word formating
If you mean you want every occurrence of a word in your text to be
bold, then do Find/Replace (Ctrl-H), type the word in the upper box, put your cursor in the lower box and type Ctrl-B, then click "Replace All." On Nov 3, 11:19*am, "Graham Mayor" wrote: Select the Word - CTRL+B -- Graham Mayor - *Word MVP My web sitewww.gmayor.com Word MVP web sitehttp://word.mvps.org "zeeziuke" wrote in message ... Hello, how to make one word in the whole text in bold, using MS Word 2003? Thanks in advance.- |
#4
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Word formating
zeeziuke wrote on 11/03/2010 10:07 ET :
Hello, how to make one word in the whole text in bold, using MS Word 2003? Thanks in advance. I know this, but how to make that Word would automatically find and make one specific word in bold in the whole text? |
#5
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Word formating
See Peter's reply. There is no 'automatic' way of doing it. Replace is the
closest (or you could use a macro). -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org "zeeziuke" wrote in message ... zeeziuke wrote on 11/03/2010 10:07 ET : Hello, how to make one word in the whole text in bold, using MS Word 2003? Thanks in advance. I know this, but how to make that Word would automatically find and make one specific word in bold in the whole text? |
#6
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Word formating
On 2010-11-05 07:40:22 +0000, Graham Mayor said:
See Peter's reply. There is no 'automatic' way of doing it. Replace is the closest (or you could use a macro). You could make this transformation automatic by using an autocorrect options and enable the formatting for that word. I did this by the following steps: 1. Type the required word. 2. Make it bold manually 3. Select the word 4. Select AutoCorrect which comes up with the replacement word listed. 5. Type the same word in the replace column. The most obvious downside is that this will apply to all documents created from that point on. -- Cheers, Steve The reply-to email address is a spam trap. Email steve 'at' shodgson 'dot' org 'dot' uk |
#7
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Word formating
"Steve Hodgson" wrote in message
... On 2010-11-05 07:40:22 +0000, Graham Mayor said: The most obvious downside is that this will apply to all documents created from that point on. The other obvious downside is that it will not work for existing documents -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org |
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