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#1
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I have a table with three columns into which I'm placing text boxes. I'd like
to have the text boxes be evenly distributed (with the same gutter between each), and also be positioned so that the tops line up. I'd prefer to do this automatically, rather than trying to line them up "by eye". I'm using Microsoft Word (Office 11 Pro). |
#2
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I may be misunderstanding -- "text boxes" in Word has a distinct
meaning, and I think you are just saying you want to place some text inside a table "cell." It is possible to format the table cells and the text inside to achieve the effect you describe with a five-column table without messing with "text boxes." As an example, create a 5 column, 5 row table. Highlight the first column, go to Table, Table Properties, Column, and make the width 2 inches. Repeat for the third and fifth column, but make the width 0.25" for the second and fourth column. Make sure that no borders exist for right now. Your narrow columns will serve as gutters Now highlight the first row, go to Table, Table Properties, Row and specify the height to be EXACTLY 1.25". Type in some text in each cell of the table, then highlight all the text and go to FORMAT PARAGRAPH. Set the left and right indent 0.1 inches, space before and space after to "6 pt" and the alignment to Justified. Lastly highlight a cell that requires a border and go to FORMAT BORDER, and choose the box option. Repeat as needed. Problems? Width of columns should be figured out with a little math. 8.5" wide paper minus left & right margin gives me entire table width. It is always easiest to use "simple" numbers on a piece of scratch paper rather than using the "drag and drop" method of adjusting columns inside the Word document. Row height not allowing all the text to be seen? You can use the row height "At least" instead of "exact" Need the boxes to be of different heights -- Instead of highlighting the cell and applying the border to the cell, try highlighting just the words inside and applying the border, OR looking for the option inside the borders menu for paragraph rather than cell. Cell is usually the default. You might also consider adding more rows to serve as vertical spacers |
#3
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Thank you to both LH and Suzanne. I tried your suggestion LH and I understand
the concept. I'm trying to write a "newsletter" so I need the text to wrap and for each blob of text in a column to be linked with the text in the next column. When I tried to that with tables, the text pushed the table width wider - did not wrap, and I could not find a way to wrap text in the table even though I went to table propertiescelloptionsand checked "wrap text". Initially, I thought that to build an email newsletter, the "text box inside of a table" would work because that's how the Microsoft templates are formatted. Unfortunately when I import the resulting .html document, Lotus makes a mess of my formatting. Obviously there are several issues here - not the least of which is my lack of experience with the program. Any other ideas would be most appreciated. "LH" wrote: I may be misunderstanding -- "text boxes" in Word has a distinct meaning, and I think you are just saying you want to place some text inside a table "cell." It is possible to format the table cells and the text inside to achieve the effect you describe with a five-column table without messing with "text boxes." As an example, create a 5 column, 5 row table. Highlight the first column, go to Table, Table Properties, Column, and make the width 2 inches. Repeat for the third and fifth column, but make the width 0.25" for the second and fourth column. Make sure that no borders exist for right now. Your narrow columns will serve as gutters Now highlight the first row, go to Table, Table Properties, Row and specify the height to be EXACTLY 1.25". Type in some text in each cell of the table, then highlight all the text and go to FORMAT PARAGRAPH. Set the left and right indent 0.1 inches, space before and space after to "6 pt" and the alignment to Justified. Lastly highlight a cell that requires a border and go to FORMAT BORDER, and choose the box option. Repeat as needed. Problems? Width of columns should be figured out with a little math. 8.5" wide paper minus left & right margin gives me entire table width. It is always easiest to use "simple" numbers on a piece of scratch paper rather than using the "drag and drop" method of adjusting columns inside the Word document. Row height not allowing all the text to be seen? You can use the row height "At least" instead of "exact" Need the boxes to be of different heights -- Instead of highlighting the cell and applying the border to the cell, try highlighting just the words inside and applying the border, OR looking for the option inside the borders menu for paragraph rather than cell. Cell is usually the default. You might also consider adding more rows to serve as vertical spacers |
#4
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If the text boxes were not in a table, you could use Draw | Align and
Distribute. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Laurel" wrote in message ... I have a table with three columns into which I'm placing text boxes. I'd like to have the text boxes be evenly distributed (with the same gutter between each), and also be positioned so that the tops line up. I'd prefer to do this automatically, rather than trying to line them up "by eye". I'm using Microsoft Word (Office 11 Pro). |
#5
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[list=1][*]Select all the text boxes you want to distribute evenly.[*]Go to the "Format" tab in the ribbon.[*]Click on the "Align" dropdown menu and select "Distribute Horizontally".[*]This will distribute the text boxes evenly with the same gutter between each.[*]To make sure the tops of the text boxes line up, select all the text boxes again.[*]Go to the "Format" tab in the ribbon.[*]Click on the "Align" dropdown menu and select "Align Top".[*]This will align the tops of all the text boxes.
If you want to make sure the text boxes are also the same size, you can follow these additional steps: [*]Select all the text boxes again.[*]Go to the "Format" tab in the ribbon.[*]Click on the "Size" dropdown menu and select "Size and Position".[*]In the "Size and Position" dialog box, make sure the "Lock aspect ratio" checkbox is checked.[*]Enter the desired height or width for one of the text boxes.[*]Click "OK".[*]All the selected text boxes will now be the same size. By following these steps, you can easily distribute text boxes evenly, align their tops, and make them the same size in Microsoft Word.
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