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Help! I have been creating simple tables in Word and sometimes when other
people open them, they're all misaligned. I just discovered (by copying a Word table and pasting it into Excel) that whenever I add a hard return within a cell, it adds a transparent row. So I can't see the new row in Word, but I can see it in Excel. When I remove all the hard returns from my Word table cells, the problem goes away. Has anyone experienced this? How can I stop it? I know I've used hard returns in Word cells in the past without any problem. Thanks for your help, -- db |
#2
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That's a quirk of pasting Word tables into Excel: Excel uses one row for
each 'paragraph line' in the source. It's got nothing to do with the rows of the table in Word. "Dan" wrote in message ... Help! I have been creating simple tables in Word and sometimes when other people open them, they're all misaligned. I just discovered (by copying a Word table and pasting it into Excel) that whenever I add a hard return within a cell, it adds a transparent row. So I can't see the new row in Word, but I can see it in Excel. When I remove all the hard returns from my Word table cells, the problem goes away. Has anyone experienced this? How can I stop it? I know I've used hard returns in Word cells in the past without any problem. Thanks for your help, -- db |
#3
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Thanks for the response. It explains the Excel behavior but gets me back to
square one in terms of why my Word tables are getting garbled on one user's machine. -- db "Jezebel" wrote: That's a quirk of pasting Word tables into Excel: Excel uses one row for each 'paragraph line' in the source. It's got nothing to do with the rows of the table in Word. "Dan" wrote in message ... Help! I have been creating simple tables in Word and sometimes when other people open them, they're all misaligned. I just discovered (by copying a Word table and pasting it into Excel) that whenever I add a hard return within a cell, it adds a transparent row. So I can't see the new row in Word, but I can see it in Excel. When I remove all the hard returns from my Word table cells, the problem goes away. Has anyone experienced this? How can I stop it? I know I've used hard returns in Word cells in the past without any problem. Thanks for your help, -- db |
#4
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You'll need to provide more information to get help on that.
"Dan" wrote in message ... Thanks for the response. It explains the Excel behavior but gets me back to square one in terms of why my Word tables are getting garbled on one user's machine. -- db "Jezebel" wrote: That's a quirk of pasting Word tables into Excel: Excel uses one row for each 'paragraph line' in the source. It's got nothing to do with the rows of the table in Word. "Dan" wrote in message ... Help! I have been creating simple tables in Word and sometimes when other people open them, they're all misaligned. I just discovered (by copying a Word table and pasting it into Excel) that whenever I add a hard return within a cell, it adds a transparent row. So I can't see the new row in Word, but I can see it in Excel. When I remove all the hard returns from my Word table cells, the problem goes away. Has anyone experienced this? How can I stop it? I know I've used hard returns in Word cells in the past without any problem. Thanks for your help, -- db |
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