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As part of the table style, you can set properties independently for each of
the options under the 'Apply formatting to' (whole table, top row, odd columns, etc). Unless you do a lot of tables that are identically formatted, this is usually as much specification as you want in advance; beyond that you generally need to apply paragraph styles to individual paragraphs within the table. "Jen" wrote in message ... I am trying to format my documents using styles, but I'm having real trouble when it comes to tables. I'm not sure I understand how Word's styles apply to tables. I have set up a table style that makes the top row of my tables shaded (it's also supposed to bold the top line, although this doesn't always work). But I want my table text to be smaller - 10 pt instead of 12 pt - and I usually need different justification, alignment, etc. Is there no way to set up a table style that takes all this into account? If not, how do you get around this? Do I need to set up a whole other set of styles for the fonts, alignments, etc. I use within my tables? Maybe it's just me, but this seems like an awful lot of styles, not to mention work!! |
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