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#1
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Not sure if this is the right sub-forum of microsoft.public.word but
here goes anyway. I am using Word 97 SR-1 updated to SR-2 on a ME windows machine. What I am wanting to do is to take a single line of text with only a few words - no more than half a dozen at the most - and split this so some of the words are left justified and some of the words are right justified. Example - I want to alter the text string AAA BBB CCC DDD EEE FFF to look like AAA BBB CCC ---- to the left ----- maximum space ---- to the right ------ DDD EEE FFF all on one line. Now, obviously I know I can do this by inserting tabs and spaces - but is there a way I can do this as a format, so that the left hand text always starts from the left, and the right hand text is always as far to the right as possible ? I've been fiddling with this for some time, can't seem to figure it out. Is there a way to do this in Word 97 ? If it needs a macro to do it, I am OK with using these. TIA. -- Nick |
#2
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![]() D7666 wrote: AAA BBB CCC ---- to the left ----- maximum space ---- to the right ------ DDD EEE FFF all on one line. I just read over that , not sure if I made it clear. AAA BBB CCC need to be fully to the left starting from the left margin with no more than a single space between them, while DDD EEE FFF need to be fully to the right with only a single space between them. CCC and DDD need to be seperated by the biggest gap possible. -- Nick |
#3
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Hi
The normal way to do this is to set a right-aligned tab at the right margin. Then, cick after CCC and press Tab. If you were going to automate it in some way, you would still need to identify, for each paragraph, what was to be to the left and what was to be to the right. So at a minimum, you'd need to click in the appropriate spot and 'mark' it in some way. Since that effort is no greater than clicking and pressing Tab, I can't see any advantage in trying to automate it. Hope this helps. Shauna Kelly. Microsoft MVP. http://www.shaunakelly.com/word "D7666" wrote in message ups.com... D7666 wrote: AAA BBB CCC ---- to the left ----- maximum space ---- to the right ------ DDD EEE FFF all on one line. I just read over that , not sure if I made it clear. AAA BBB CCC need to be fully to the left starting from the left margin with no more than a single space between them, while DDD EEE FFF need to be fully to the right with only a single space between them. CCC and DDD need to be seperated by the biggest gap possible. -- Nick |
#4
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![]() Shauna Kelly wrote: Hi The normal way to do this is to set a right-aligned tab at the right margin. Then, cick after CCC and press Tab. ahhh - right aligned tab, is that what it is called - this was part of my problem, not knowing what to search for. Let me give this a try early in a couple of days, when I'm back working on it. pressing Tab, I can't see any advantage in trying to automate it. I have a 1.2 MB document in which it needs doing in about 400 locations .... hence my interest in macros ... will have to figure out a way that might help. -- Nick |
#5
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![]() Shauna Kelly wrote: The normal way to do this is to set a right-aligned tab at the right margin. Hi, I have returned to the problem. I get the idea of how this should work, once the right aligned tab is set, that pressing the TAB key at the right point in the paragraph will do it. But I do not see how to set a right aligned tab at the right margin. I do Format Tabs check right alignment but on press TAB the actual tab goes in the paragraph in exactly the same way as if I had not checked the right alignment box. Is there some other setting I should look at ? TIA. -- Nick |
#6
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The easiest way to set tab stops is on the ruler. For an explanation, with
screen shots, see http://word.mvps.org/faqs/formatting/UsingRulers.htm and http://word.mvps.org/faqs/formatting/SettingTabs.htm. If you use the Tabs dialog box, you must enter a position setting for your tab stop before/after selecting the type and before clicking OK (you can set multiple tabs in one go if you click Set after each one). If you are using Word's default margins, a tab stop at the right margin would be at 6". -- 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. "D7666" wrote in message oups.com... Shauna Kelly wrote: The normal way to do this is to set a right-aligned tab at the right margin. Hi, I have returned to the problem. I get the idea of how this should work, once the right aligned tab is set, that pressing the TAB key at the right point in the paragraph will do it. But I do not see how to set a right aligned tab at the right margin. I do Format Tabs check right alignment but on press TAB the actual tab goes in the paragraph in exactly the same way as if I had not checked the right alignment box. Is there some other setting I should look at ? TIA. -- Nick |
#7
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Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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![]() Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: The easiest way to set tab stops is on the ruler. For an explanation, with screen shots, see http://word.mvps.org/faqs/formatting/UsingRulers.htm and http://word.mvps.org/faqs/formatting/SettingTabs.htm. If you use the Tabs dialog box, you must enter a position setting for your tab stop before/after selecting the type and before clicking OK (you can set multiple tabs in one go if you click Set after each one). If you are using Word's default margins, a tab stop at the right margin would be at 6". Hi, Those are excellent clear links to follow ... and have advancing my problem ... .... but I am still not getting this to work as I think it should. My understanding and use of tabs has always been exactly as in those links - that one should never use multiple tabs or spaces to create long gaps for exactly the reason if the document goes somewhere else messes up. Following those hints, I can now set a right hand tab stop on the right margin. In this case it is a special page set up - the r/h margin is at 18.00 cm but I do not think this is relevant. I can set it, and split the text in the paragraphs I need to, and it does what it should, the right text is right justified. Fine ... but the whole reason I need to do this correctly is the global page set up is almost certainly going to be altered from the present 18.00 cm right margin to something else. If I set up a right justified tab at 18.00 cm - and then change the page set up to either a wider or narrower page, the tab stop is staying fixed at 18.00 cm. My right justfied text is either beyond the margin if the page set up is narrower, or no longer fully to the right if the page is wider. This is the root of the problem - it needs to stay justified with respect to the right margin, not fixed at 18.00 cm. I hope I am not testing your patience too much here. I have been using Word 97 for 8 years now - and never in all that time have I got so bogged down with something like this. -- Nick |