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#1
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In Print Layout mode, I do a lot of quasi-page layout using tables. In the
previous versions of Word, the table lines - though set to have no border - showed up as a grey line. This allowed me to see the boundaries of the cells while designing, even though I had no intention of ever seeing them on the finished printed page. As the new version of Word seems to default to 'no border means no line', I was wondering if there was a way to toggle or set to display the cell lines while set to 'no border'. It's very disconcerting while designing to see floating white space, not knowing where cells end, begin, etc. And I am hoping to avoid having to give them a temporary colored border while designing, only to have to shut it off later. Is there a way to 'Show' the table lines, just like tabs and carriage returns? |
#2
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By "new version of Word" I assume you mean Word 2007. There is a View
Gridlines button on the Table Tools Layout tab. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Skip" wrote in message ... In Print Layout mode, I do a lot of quasi-page layout using tables. In the previous versions of Word, the table lines - though set to have no border - showed up as a grey line. This allowed me to see the boundaries of the cells while designing, even though I had no intention of ever seeing them on the finished printed page. As the new version of Word seems to default to 'no border means no line', I was wondering if there was a way to toggle or set to display the cell lines while set to 'no border'. It's very disconcerting while designing to see floating white space, not knowing where cells end, begin, etc. And I am hoping to avoid having to give them a temporary colored border while designing, only to have to shut it off later. Is there a way to 'Show' the table lines, just like tabs and carriage returns? |
#3
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No, I mean Word 2008. This feature was behaving in all previous versions.
"Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: By "new version of Word" I assume you mean Word 2007. There is a View Gridlines button on the Table Tools Layout tab. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Skip" wrote in message ... In Print Layout mode, I do a lot of quasi-page layout using tables. In the previous versions of Word, the table lines - though set to have no border - showed up as a grey line. This allowed me to see the boundaries of the cells while designing, even though I had no intention of ever seeing them on the finished printed page. As the new version of Word seems to default to 'no border means no line', I was wondering if there was a way to toggle or set to display the cell lines while set to 'no border'. It's very disconcerting while designing to see floating white space, not knowing where cells end, begin, etc. And I am hoping to avoid having to give them a temporary colored border while designing, only to have to shut it off later. Is there a way to 'Show' the table lines, just like tabs and carriage returns? |
#4
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The controls should be similar to those in Word 2007, but if there is a
difference, then you would be better off posting in the Mac-specific NGs at http://www.microsoft.com/mac/communi...pid=newsgroups -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Skip" wrote in message ... No, I mean Word 2008. This feature was behaving in all previous versions. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: By "new version of Word" I assume you mean Word 2007. There is a View Gridlines button on the Table Tools Layout tab. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Skip" wrote in message ... In Print Layout mode, I do a lot of quasi-page layout using tables. In the previous versions of Word, the table lines - though set to have no border - showed up as a grey line. This allowed me to see the boundaries of the cells while designing, even though I had no intention of ever seeing them on the finished printed page. As the new version of Word seems to default to 'no border means no line', I was wondering if there was a way to toggle or set to display the cell lines while set to 'no border'. It's very disconcerting while designing to see floating white space, not knowing where cells end, begin, etc. And I am hoping to avoid having to give them a temporary colored border while designing, only to have to shut it off later. Is there a way to 'Show' the table lines, just like tabs and carriage returns? |
#5
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Skip wrote:
In Print Layout mode, I do a lot of quasi-page layout using tables. In the previous versions of Word, the table lines - though set to have no border - showed up as a grey line. This allowed me to see the boundaries of the cells while designing, even though I had no intention of ever seeing them on the finished printed page. As the new version of Word seems to default to 'no border means no line', I was wondering if there was a way to toggle or set to display the cell lines while set to 'no border'. It's very disconcerting while designing to see floating white space, not knowing where cells end, begin, etc. And I am hoping to avoid having to give them a temporary colored border while designing, only to have to shut it off later. Is there a way to 'Show' the table lines, just like tabs and carriage returns? When the cursor is in a table, the Table Tools ribbon is available. The View Gridlines button is at the left end of the Layout tab on that ribbon. You can also go to Office button Word Options Advanced Show Document Content and check the box for "Text boundaries", which will display table cells as well as many other boundaries. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
#6
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Text boundaries options and view gridlines buttons works fine for one table
at a time and for new tables. But I have hundreds of thousands of tables that were converted from Word 2003 to Word 2007 that printed "no border" but displayed gridlines in 2003 and changed to a BLACK border (displays and prints) in 2007--through no changes of my own. There is no UNDO feature when converting a file. Your only option is to select EVERY table and change the color from black to none. Then click "view gridlines" to see them on the screen. |
#7
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Yes, there is a way to show the table lines in Microsoft Word even if the table borders are set to "no border". Here's how you can do it:
Alternatively, you can also use the keyboard shortcut "Ctrl + Shift + 8" to toggle the display of table gridlines on and off. I hope this helps you see the boundaries of your cells while designing your document without having to give them a temporary colored border.
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