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![]() Obviously what you are suggesting is the best way. But in a long document where styles haven't been used consistently, using Find and Replace will be quicker. And for (long) documents with many editors, it might be the only practical way. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "James Ko" wrote in message ... If you are using a Style, there you go. Change the font formatting in, for example, the Normal style and it's done for you. If you are not using a Style, then create one and apply to the document as you like. James "Gordon Padwick" wrote in message ... I want to change fonts throughout a long (420-page) Word document. Is there a straightforward way to do that without having to go through the entire document manually? At present, the document uses a mix of Times Roman and Century Schoolbook for text and a mix of Arial and Lucida Console for programming examples. It has that mix because parts of the document were created by different people. I need to convert all the Times Roman to Century Schoolbook and all the Arial to Lucida Console. My guess is that I need to create a macro, but I wonder if Word offers a simpler approach. Gordon |
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