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#1
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It was quite simple in Word 2003 via Tools Customize.
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#2
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There is no Menu Bar in Word 2007, only the Ribbon, and the only
customization permitted is of the QAT. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "kaoinla" wrote in message ... It was quite simple in Word 2003 via Tools Customize. |
#3
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That's a bit sweeping? - http://gregmaxey.mvps.org/Customize_Ribbon.htm and
http://gregmaxey.mvps.org/Customize_...amatically.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: There is no Menu Bar in Word 2007, only the Ribbon, and the only customization permitted is of the QAT. "kaoinla" wrote in message ... It was quite simple in Word 2003 via Tools Customize. |
#4
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I don't think it's much of a stretch to assume that anyone who calls the
Ribbon the "Menu Bar" probably isn't going to want to learn to use RibbonX. g -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... That's a bit sweeping? - http://gregmaxey.mvps.org/Customize_Ribbon.htm and http://gregmaxey.mvps.org/Customize_...amatically.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: There is no Menu Bar in Word 2007, only the Ribbon, and the only customization permitted is of the QAT. "kaoinla" wrote in message ... It was quite simple in Word 2003 via Tools Customize. |
#5
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On Nov 18, 10:59*am, kaoinla
wrote: It was quite simple in Word 2003 via Tools Customize. kaoinla, I think Suzanne Barnhill must be having an off day. She doesn't normally let her opinions influence the accuracy of her posts. Please accept my apology on her behalf. |
#6
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Actually I did exactly mean the Menu bar. It was the bar at the top in 2003
with the commands File, Edit, View, etc. I do see what Suzanne is saying now in Word 2007, the formerly customizable bar menus have now become just dumb tabs for the ribbon. I hid the ribbon almost immediately, and I've filled up the quick access toolbar. I wanted to add some macros into a menu listing as I had done previously. Now I'm beginning to think I will have to create a control toolbar or something to hold them. I will also look into customizing the Ribbon. I think that should really be as easy to do that as it is to customize the QAT and was to customize the 2003 Menu bar. If I could create an additional QAT that would be helpful. Two QAT's would still take up less room than the ribbon. Thanks for all of your replies! |
#7
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kaoinla,
You will not be able to create a toolbar in Word2007 or a second QAT. Considering your apparent goal of keeping the Ribbon hidden while having access to multiple commands (more that your QAT currently can hold), an option that you might consider is customizing your Ribbon to add a custom tab, containing custom groups, containing custom menus that are populated with your custom macros or built-in Word commands. You could then add these custom groups to your QAT. Once the groups are added to the QAT you can again hide your ribbon. For some examples of custom menus see: http://gregmaxey.mvps.org/Ribbon_Menu_Controls.htm "kaoinla" wrote in message ... Actually I did exactly mean the Menu bar. It was the bar at the top in 2003 with the commands File, Edit, View, etc. I do see what Suzanne is saying now in Word 2007, the formerly customizable bar menus have now become just dumb tabs for the ribbon. I hid the ribbon almost immediately, and I've filled up the quick access toolbar. I wanted to add some macros into a menu listing as I had done previously. Now I'm beginning to think I will have to create a control toolbar or something to hold them. I will also look into customizing the Ribbon. I think that should really be as easy to do that as it is to customize the QAT and was to customize the 2003 Menu bar. If I could create an additional QAT that would be helpful. Two QAT's would still take up less room than the ribbon. Thanks for all of your replies! |
#8
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On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 07:54:05 -0800, kaoinla
wrote: Actually I did exactly mean the Menu bar. It was the bar at the top in 2003 with the commands File, Edit, View, etc. I do see what Suzanne is saying now in Word 2007, the formerly customizable bar menus have now become just dumb tabs for the ribbon. I hid the ribbon almost immediately, and I've filled up the quick access toolbar. I wanted to add some macros into a menu listing as I had done previously. Now I'm beginning to think I will have to create a control toolbar or something to hold them. I will also look into customizing the Ribbon. I think that should really be as easy to do that as it is to customize the QAT and was to customize the 2003 Menu bar. If I could create an additional QAT that would be helpful. Two QAT's would still take up less room than the ribbon. Thanks for all of your replies! Hi kaoinla, You're only about three years late this party. The customizability -- or rather the lack of it -- in the ribbon and other parts of the so-called Fluent Interface has been discussed since Office 2007 was in beta release in 2006. Jensen Harris, the head of the UI group that designed Office 2007, had a quite extensive blog (http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/pages/...-contents.aspx) that included a few articles on customization, such as http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/archiv...27/648269.aspx. He explains how the team decided to limit easy customization to the Quick Access Toolbar. Most of the MVPs felt, and still feel, that the data the designers relied on were skewed and incomplete, as they make no allowance for templates that are customized by specialists and then distributed to thousands of other users. Three years of complaints have led Microsoft to conclude that making people use raw RibbonX to do ribbon customization was a mistake. Since the public beta of Office 2010 was released this week, I can happily tell you that it has a Customize Ribbon dialog that works a lot like the Customize Quick Access Toolbar dialog. You can reposition or hide the built-in groups, and create custom groups containing whatever commands you want. -- 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. |
#9
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On Nov 19, 1:41*pm, Jay Freedman wrote:
On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 07:54:05 -0800, kaoinla wrote: Actually I did exactly mean the Menu bar. *It was the bar at the top in 2003 with the commands File, Edit, View, etc. *I do see what Suzanne is saying now in Word 2007, the formerly customizable bar menus have now become just dumb tabs for the ribbon. I hid the ribbon almost immediately, and *I've filled up the quick access toolbar. *I wanted to add some macros into a menu listing as I had done previously. *Now I'm beginning to think I will have to create a control toolbar or something to hold them. I will also look into customizing the Ribbon. *I think that should really be as easy to do that as it is to customize the QAT and was to customize the 2003 Menu bar. *If I could create an additional QAT that would be helpful. * Two QAT's would still take up less room than the ribbon. Thanks for all of your replies! Hi kaoinla, You're only about three years late this party. The customizability -- or rather the lack of it -- in the ribbon and other parts of the so-called Fluent Interface has been discussed since Office 2007 was in beta release in 2006. Jensen Harris, the head of the UI group that designed Office 2007, had a quite extensive blog (http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/pages/...-contents.aspx) that included a few articles on customization, such ashttp://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/archive/2006/06/27/648269.aspx. He explains how the team decided to limit easy customization to the Quick Access Toolbar. Most of the MVPs felt, and still feel, that the data the designers relied on were skewed and incomplete, as they make no allowance for templates that are customized by specialists and then distributed to thousands of other users. Three years of complaints have led Microsoft to conclude that making people use raw RibbonX to do ribbon customization was a mistake. Since the public beta of Office 2010 was released this week, I can happily tell you that it has a Customize Ribbon dialog that works a lot like the Customize Quick Access Toolbar dialog. You can reposition or hide the built-in groups, and create custom groups containing whatever commands you want. -- 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.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Jay, Thanks for this update. Can you tell us if the availability of built- in icons as been enhanced or is there a feature to create custom icons for either the QAT or the Ribbon? |
#10
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I'm looking forward to learning that as well. One of the features I lobbied
hardest for was the ability to create custom button images (if only for the QAT) or at the very least to have a wider selection of alternatives for all those "green ball" buttons that have no built-in icon. Or perhaps they could get their artists to design a built-in icon for every available button! -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Greg Maxey" wrote in message ... On Nov 19, 1:41 pm, Jay Freedman wrote: On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 07:54:05 -0800, kaoinla wrote: Actually I did exactly mean the Menu bar. It was the bar at the top in 2003 with the commands File, Edit, View, etc. I do see what Suzanne is saying now in Word 2007, the formerly customizable bar menus have now become just dumb tabs for the ribbon. I hid the ribbon almost immediately, and I've filled up the quick access toolbar. I wanted to add some macros into a menu listing as I had done previously. Now I'm beginning to think I will have to create a control toolbar or something to hold them. I will also look into customizing the Ribbon. I think that should really be as easy to do that as it is to customize the QAT and was to customize the 2003 Menu bar. If I could create an additional QAT that would be helpful. Two QAT's would still take up less room than the ribbon. Thanks for all of your replies! Hi kaoinla, You're only about three years late this party. The customizability -- or rather the lack of it -- in the ribbon and other parts of the so-called Fluent Interface has been discussed since Office 2007 was in beta release in 2006. Jensen Harris, the head of the UI group that designed Office 2007, had a quite extensive blog (http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/pages/...-contents.aspx) that included a few articles on customization, such ashttp://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/archive/2006/06/27/648269.aspx. He explains how the team decided to limit easy customization to the Quick Access Toolbar. Most of the MVPs felt, and still feel, that the data the designers relied on were skewed and incomplete, as they make no allowance for templates that are customized by specialists and then distributed to thousands of other users. Three years of complaints have led Microsoft to conclude that making people use raw RibbonX to do ribbon customization was a mistake. Since the public beta of Office 2010 was released this week, I can happily tell you that it has a Customize Ribbon dialog that works a lot like the Customize Quick Access Toolbar dialog. You can reposition or hide the built-in groups, and create custom groups containing whatever commands you want. -- 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.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Jay, Thanks for this update. Can you tell us if the availability of built- in icons as been enhanced or is there a feature to create custom icons for either the QAT or the Ribbon? |
#11
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That is good news!
-- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 07:54:05 -0800, kaoinla wrote: Actually I did exactly mean the Menu bar. It was the bar at the top in 2003 with the commands File, Edit, View, etc. I do see what Suzanne is saying now in Word 2007, the formerly customizable bar menus have now become just dumb tabs for the ribbon. I hid the ribbon almost immediately, and I've filled up the quick access toolbar. I wanted to add some macros into a menu listing as I had done previously. Now I'm beginning to think I will have to create a control toolbar or something to hold them. I will also look into customizing the Ribbon. I think that should really be as easy to do that as it is to customize the QAT and was to customize the 2003 Menu bar. If I could create an additional QAT that would be helpful. Two QAT's would still take up less room than the ribbon. Thanks for all of your replies! Hi kaoinla, You're only about three years late this party. The customizability -- or rather the lack of it -- in the ribbon and other parts of the so-called Fluent Interface has been discussed since Office 2007 was in beta release in 2006. Jensen Harris, the head of the UI group that designed Office 2007, had a quite extensive blog (http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/pages/...-contents.aspx) that included a few articles on customization, such as http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/archiv...27/648269.aspx. He explains how the team decided to limit easy customization to the Quick Access Toolbar. Most of the MVPs felt, and still feel, that the data the designers relied on were skewed and incomplete, as they make no allowance for templates that are customized by specialists and then distributed to thousands of other users. Three years of complaints have led Microsoft to conclude that making people use raw RibbonX to do ribbon customization was a mistake. Since the public beta of Office 2010 was released this week, I can happily tell you that it has a Customize Ribbon dialog that works a lot like the Customize Quick Access Toolbar dialog. You can reposition or hide the built-in groups, and create custom groups containing whatever commands you want. -- 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. |
#12
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Thanks Jay I know I am 3 years behind you all, but very encouraging on the
one hand. Knowing that my workplace only adopted usage of Office 2007 this year in 2009 makes me think that I won't see Office 2010 until 2013 which is discouraging. I will be looking into customizing the Ribbon for now. But At least I have hope for the future. Thanks so much to Graham and Greg and all of you! "Jay Freedman" wrote: Hi kaoinla, You're only about three years late this party. The customizability -- or rather the lack of it -- in the ribbon and other parts of the so-called Fluent Interface has been discussed since Office 2007 was in beta release in 2006. Jensen Harris, the head of the UI group that designed Office 2007, had a quite extensive blog (http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/pages/...-contents.aspx) that included a few articles on customization, such as http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/archiv...27/648269.aspx. He explains how the team decided to limit easy customization to the Quick Access Toolbar. Most of the MVPs felt, and still feel, that the data the designers relied on were skewed and incomplete, as they make no allowance for templates that are customized by specialists and then distributed to thousands of other users. Three years of complaints have led Microsoft to conclude that making people use raw RibbonX to do ribbon customization was a mistake. Since the public beta of Office 2010 was released this week, I can happily tell you that it has a Customize Ribbon dialog that works a lot like the Customize Quick Access Toolbar dialog. You can reposition or hide the built-in groups, and create custom groups containing whatever commands you want. -- 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. . |
#13
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On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 11:47:05 -0800 (PST), Greg Maxey
wrote: On Nov 19, 1:41*pm, Jay Freedman wrote: [snip] Three years of complaints have led Microsoft to conclude that making people use raw RibbonX to do ribbon customization was a mistake. Since the public beta of Office 2010 was released this week, I can happily tell you that it has a Customize Ribbon dialog that works a lot like the Customize Quick Access Toolbar dialog. You can reposition or hide the built-in groups, and create custom groups containing whatever commands you want. Jay, Thanks for this update. Can you tell us if the availability of built- in icons as been enhanced or is there a feature to create custom icons for either the QAT or the Ribbon? As far as I can tell, there has been only one change in the Customize QAT facility, a button for exporting or importing a file of customizations. There doesn't seem to be any change in the requirement to use one of the supplied icons or in the number of icons in the selection. I don't know whether any changes are planned in that area, but at this late date it wouldn't seem likely. It also appears (from a short experiment; there's woefully little documentation about this) that the Customize Ribbon dialog offers only the same selection of icons as the Customize QAT dialog. It looks like it might be possible to hack the result to add a getImage callback for an external image, but that wouldn't be part of the quick-n-easy toolset. Bear in mind that we're getting more customizability than we have in Office 2007, but it seems to given grudgingly. -- 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. |
#14
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They just don't get it, do they? Looks like I'll be sticking with my custom
icons from Word 2003 in a blob on the QAT. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 11:47:05 -0800 (PST), Greg Maxey wrote: On Nov 19, 1:41 pm, Jay Freedman wrote: [snip] Three years of complaints have led Microsoft to conclude that making people use raw RibbonX to do ribbon customization was a mistake. Since the public beta of Office 2010 was released this week, I can happily tell you that it has a Customize Ribbon dialog that works a lot like the Customize Quick Access Toolbar dialog. You can reposition or hide the built-in groups, and create custom groups containing whatever commands you want. Jay, Thanks for this update. Can you tell us if the availability of built- in icons as been enhanced or is there a feature to create custom icons for either the QAT or the Ribbon? As far as I can tell, there has been only one change in the Customize QAT facility, a button for exporting or importing a file of customizations. There doesn't seem to be any change in the requirement to use one of the supplied icons or in the number of icons in the selection. I don't know whether any changes are planned in that area, but at this late date it wouldn't seem likely. It also appears (from a short experiment; there's woefully little documentation about this) that the Customize Ribbon dialog offers only the same selection of icons as the Customize QAT dialog. It looks like it might be possible to hack the result to add a getImage callback for an external image, but that wouldn't be part of the quick-n-easy toolset. Bear in mind that we're getting more customizability than we have in Office 2007, but it seems to given grudgingly. -- 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. |
#15
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Here's a little more information:
http://blogs.technet.com/office2010/...bbon-mine.aspx Pam Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: They just don't get it, do they? Looks like I'll be sticking with my custom icons from Word 2003 in a blob on the QAT. -- Message posted via OfficeKB.com http://www.officekb.com/Uwe/Forums.a...ement/200911/1 |
#16
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We saw this demonstrated at the MVP Summit last spring, but of course we
couldn't talk about it. I had hoped that there would be more progress in that direction before Office 2010 was released, but any feature not present in beta 2 will not be in the shipping version. I find it incredibly disingenuous to say, "Office is used by approximately one billion people worldwide, and we know the default organization of commands cant possibly match the preferences of every single one of our customers." But when Office 2007 was designed, the designers claimed that the vast majority of users never customized anything and that most corporate customers wanted an immutable interface (to facilitate Help Desk support) and most users also wanted a predictable environment (MS had been stung before by "adaptive menus" and wasn't about to repeat that debacle). That was the rationale for making Ribbon customization the province of developers rather than most end users (as compared to the relative ease with which menus and toolbars could be customized in earlier versions. This is not a complete about-face, and I'm glad they've been shaken up and have waked up to reality, but I still believe it doesn't go far enough. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Pamelia Caswell via OfficeKB.com" u43222@uwe wrote in message news:9f6166ba1e594@uwe... Here's a little more information: http://blogs.technet.com/office2010/...bbon-mine.aspx Pam Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: They just don't get it, do they? Looks like I'll be sticking with my custom icons from Word 2003 in a blob on the QAT. -- Message posted via OfficeKB.com http://www.officekb.com/Uwe/Forums.a...ement/200911/1 |
#17
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I think they are right. Few people customize the interface, and IT people are
mostly against it. Still, MS probably just used that conclusion to help them decide what to do and when to do it in their development schedule. I'm not sure I'll use ribbon customization. I'd want to carry the customization with me in my editing.dotm add-on just as I do with the QAT. It's not clear yet that that is possible. Pam Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: We saw this demonstrated at the MVP Summit last spring, but of course we couldn't talk about it. I had hoped that there would be more progress in that direction before Office 2010 was released, but any feature not present in beta 2 will not be in the shipping version. I find it incredibly disingenuous to say, "Office is used by approximately one billion people worldwide, and we know the default organization of commands cant possibly match the preferences of every single one of our customers." But when Office 2007 was designed, the designers claimed that the vast majority of users never customized anything and that most corporate customers wanted an immutable interface (to facilitate Help Desk support) and most users also wanted a predictable environment (MS had been stung before by "adaptive menus" and wasn't about to repeat that debacle). That was the rationale for making Ribbon customization the province of developers rather than most end users (as compared to the relative ease with which menus and toolbars could be customized in earlier versions. This is not a complete about-face, and I'm glad they've been shaken up and have waked up to reality, but I still believe it doesn't go far enough. Here's a little more information: [quoted text clipped - 5 lines] custom icons from Word 2003 in a blob on the QAT. -- Message posted via http://www.officekb.com |
#18
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Pamelia Caswell via OfficeKB.com wrote:
I'm not sure I'll use ribbon customization. I'd want to carry the customization with me in my editing.dotm add-on just as I do with the QAT. It's not clear yet that that is possible. How Office 2010 will change things I haven't a clue, but you can certainly apply changes to the ribbon in Word 2007 with add-ins and document templates. There are some examples on my web site e.g. http://www.gmayor.com/EnvelopesAndLabels.htm and http://www.gmayor.com/individual_merge_letters.htm . It is just relatively complicated to achieve. If Office 2010 gives more access to the process, I don't see why the general premise of templates having priority should change. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org |
#19
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That's a help. Thanks.
Pam Graham Mayor wrote: I'm not sure I'll use ribbon customization. I'd want to carry the customization with me in my editing.dotm add-on just as I do with the QAT. It's not clear yet that that is possible. How Office 2010 will change things I haven't a clue, but you can certainly apply changes to the ribbon in Word 2007 with add-ins and document templates. There are some examples on my web site e.g. http://www.gmayor.com/EnvelopesAndLabels.htm and http://www.gmayor.com/individual_merge_letters.htm . It is just relatively complicated to achieve. If Office 2010 gives more access to the process, I don't see why the general premise of templates having priority should change. -- Message posted via http://www.officekb.com |
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