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#1
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After a page break the heading format runs into the previous page
After inserting a page break, if the new page starts with a heading line then
the heading format runs into the previous page last line. This is especially problematic when the heading format includes shading because the last line of the previous page becomes completely shaded. If I try to remove the heading format from the previous page, then the heading line of the new page disappears! This also happens with columns: the heading of a new column line runs into the old one when using the column break. |
#2
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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After a page break the heading format runs into the previous page
Also, the "page break before" solution does not work when working with
columns. Any idea about how to do it with columns? "jotego" wrote: After inserting a page break, if the new page starts with a heading line then the heading format runs into the previous page last line. This is especially problematic when the heading format includes shading because the last line of the previous page becomes completely shaded. If I try to remove the heading format from the previous page, then the heading line of the new page disappears! This also happens with columns: the heading of a new column line runs into the old one when using the column break. |
#3
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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After a page break the heading format runs into the previous p
I think that the following could be what causes the problems:
A. If you pressed Ctrl+Return instead of Return at the end of the "previous page last line", you did not create a new paragraph - the "heading" and your "last line" still make up one paragraph and will thus always have the same paragraph style. B. If you positioned the insertion marker in the start of the heading and pressed Ctrl+Return to insert a page break, the page break will also be applied the heading style. If A and/or B above is correct, you should instead do as follows: A. Always press Return (not Ctrl+Return) to start a new paragraph. B. Do not create page breaks using Ctrl+Return. Instead, click in the paragraph that is to start on a new page. Then select Format Paragraph Line and Page Breaks tab and turn on "Page break before" (then the page break will be an attribute of the paragraph and it will work correctly). However, according to you second post, you may already use this method. I recommend that you turn on nonprinting characters (formatting marks) so that you can see exactly what you have in your document (press Ctrl+Shift+8 or click the ¶ icon on the Standard toolbar). A paragraph mark looks like this: ¶. A manual line break looks like a bent arrow. For further details about formatting marks, see this article: http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/NonPrintChars.htm About columns: If you want the text to start on a new page, use the "Page break before"-method described above. If you want the text to start in the next column, use Insert Break Column break. -- Regards Lene Fredborg DocTools - Denmark www.thedoctools.com Document automation - add-ins, macros and templates for Microsoft Word "jotego" wrote: Also, the "page break before" solution does not work when working with columns. Any idea about how to do it with columns? "jotego" wrote: After inserting a page break, if the new page starts with a heading line then the heading format runs into the previous page last line. This is especially problematic when the heading format includes shading because the last line of the previous page becomes completely shaded. If I try to remove the heading format from the previous page, then the heading line of the new page disappears! This also happens with columns: the heading of a new column line runs into the old one when using the column break. |
#4
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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After a page break the heading format runs into the previous p
Thanks a lot for your reply.
I always thought that starting a page meant starting a paragraph but I see I was wrong. Creating a new column with the "insert break - column" method does not start a paragraph either so it looks like the only way to have a heading starting a column is to manually press Return as many times as needed. It is odd this has to be done manually though. "Lene Fredborg" wrote: I think that the following could be what causes the problems: A. If you pressed Ctrl+Return instead of Return at the end of the "previous page last line", you did not create a new paragraph - the "heading" and your "last line" still make up one paragraph and will thus always have the same paragraph style. B. If you positioned the insertion marker in the start of the heading and pressed Ctrl+Return to insert a page break, the page break will also be applied the heading style. If A and/or B above is correct, you should instead do as follows: A. Always press Return (not Ctrl+Return) to start a new paragraph. B. Do not create page breaks using Ctrl+Return. Instead, click in the paragraph that is to start on a new page. Then select Format Paragraph Line and Page Breaks tab and turn on "Page break before" (then the page break will be an attribute of the paragraph and it will work correctly). However, according to you second post, you may already use this method. I recommend that you turn on nonprinting characters (formatting marks) so that you can see exactly what you have in your document (press Ctrl+Shift+8 or click the ¶ icon on the Standard toolbar). A paragraph mark looks like this: ¶. A manual line break looks like a bent arrow. For further details about formatting marks, see this article: http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/NonPrintChars.htm About columns: If you want the text to start on a new page, use the "Page break before"-method described above. If you want the text to start in the next column, use Insert Break Column break. -- Regards Lene Fredborg DocTools - Denmark www.thedoctools.com Document automation - add-ins, macros and templates for Microsoft Word "jotego" wrote: Also, the "page break before" solution does not work when working with columns. Any idea about how to do it with columns? "jotego" wrote: After inserting a page break, if the new page starts with a heading line then the heading format runs into the previous page last line. This is especially problematic when the heading format includes shading because the last line of the previous page becomes completely shaded. If I try to remove the heading format from the previous page, then the heading line of the new page disappears! This also happens with columns: the heading of a new column line runs into the old one when using the column break. |
#5
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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After a page break the heading format runs into the previous p
NO, you just need a hard return before you insert the column break or the
page break. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "jotego" wrote in message ... Thanks a lot for your reply. I always thought that starting a page meant starting a paragraph but I see I was wrong. Creating a new column with the "insert break - column" method does not start a paragraph either so it looks like the only way to have a heading starting a column is to manually press Return as many times as needed. It is odd this has to be done manually though. "Lene Fredborg" wrote: I think that the following could be what causes the problems: A. If you pressed Ctrl+Return instead of Return at the end of the "previous page last line", you did not create a new paragraph - the "heading" and your "last line" still make up one paragraph and will thus always have the same paragraph style. B. If you positioned the insertion marker in the start of the heading and pressed Ctrl+Return to insert a page break, the page break will also be applied the heading style. If A and/or B above is correct, you should instead do as follows: A. Always press Return (not Ctrl+Return) to start a new paragraph. B. Do not create page breaks using Ctrl+Return. Instead, click in the paragraph that is to start on a new page. Then select Format Paragraph Line and Page Breaks tab and turn on "Page break before" (then the page break will be an attribute of the paragraph and it will work correctly). However, according to you second post, you may already use this method. I recommend that you turn on nonprinting characters (formatting marks) so that you can see exactly what you have in your document (press Ctrl+Shift+8 or click the ¶ icon on the Standard toolbar). A paragraph mark looks like this: ¶. A manual line break looks like a bent arrow. For further details about formatting marks, see this article: http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/NonPrintChars.htm About columns: If you want the text to start on a new page, use the "Page break before"-method described above. If you want the text to start in the next column, use Insert Break Column break. -- Regards Lene Fredborg DocTools - Denmark www.thedoctools.com Document automation - add-ins, macros and templates for Microsoft Word "jotego" wrote: Also, the "page break before" solution does not work when working with columns. Any idea about how to do it with columns? "jotego" wrote: After inserting a page break, if the new page starts with a heading line then the heading format runs into the previous page last line. This is especially problematic when the heading format includes shading because the last line of the previous page becomes completely shaded. If I try to remove the heading format from the previous page, then the heading line of the new page disappears! This also happens with columns: the heading of a new column line runs into the old one when using the column break. |
#6
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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After a page break the heading format runs into the previous p
I tried pressing Return and Shift+Return and it did not work. What do you
mean by "hard return" and how can it be done? Thank you! "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote: NO, you just need a hard return before you insert the column break or the page break. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "jotego" wrote in message ... Thanks a lot for your reply. I always thought that starting a page meant starting a paragraph but I see I was wrong. Creating a new column with the "insert break - column" method does not start a paragraph either so it looks like the only way to have a heading starting a column is to manually press Return as many times as needed. It is odd this has to be done manually though. "Lene Fredborg" wrote: I think that the following could be what causes the problems: A. If you pressed Ctrl+Return instead of Return at the end of the "previous page last line", you did not create a new paragraph - the "heading" and your "last line" still make up one paragraph and will thus always have the same paragraph style. B. If you positioned the insertion marker in the start of the heading and pressed Ctrl+Return to insert a page break, the page break will also be applied the heading style. If A and/or B above is correct, you should instead do as follows: A. Always press Return (not Ctrl+Return) to start a new paragraph. B. Do not create page breaks using Ctrl+Return. Instead, click in the paragraph that is to start on a new page. Then select Format Paragraph Line and Page Breaks tab and turn on "Page break before" (then the page break will be an attribute of the paragraph and it will work correctly). However, according to you second post, you may already use this method. I recommend that you turn on nonprinting characters (formatting marks) so that you can see exactly what you have in your document (press Ctrl+Shift+8 or click the ¶ icon on the Standard toolbar). A paragraph mark looks like this: ¶. A manual line break looks like a bent arrow. For further details about formatting marks, see this article: http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/NonPrintChars.htm About columns: If you want the text to start on a new page, use the "Page break before"-method described above. If you want the text to start in the next column, use Insert Break Column break. -- Regards Lene Fredborg DocTools - Denmark www.thedoctools.com Document automation - add-ins, macros and templates for Microsoft Word "jotego" wrote: Also, the "page break before" solution does not work when working with columns. Any idea about how to do it with columns? "jotego" wrote: After inserting a page break, if the new page starts with a heading line then the heading format runs into the previous page last line. This is especially problematic when the heading format includes shading because the last line of the previous page becomes completely shaded. If I try to remove the heading format from the previous page, then the heading line of the new page disappears! This also happens with columns: the heading of a new column line runs into the old one when using the column break. |
#7
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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After a page break the heading format runs into the previous p
By hard return, I mean you press the Enter key. And that definitely does
what you want here. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "jotego" wrote in message ... I tried pressing Return and Shift+Return and it did not work. What do you mean by "hard return" and how can it be done? Thank you! "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote: NO, you just need a hard return before you insert the column break or the page break. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "jotego" wrote in message ... Thanks a lot for your reply. I always thought that starting a page meant starting a paragraph but I see I was wrong. Creating a new column with the "insert break - column" method does not start a paragraph either so it looks like the only way to have a heading starting a column is to manually press Return as many times as needed. It is odd this has to be done manually though. "Lene Fredborg" wrote: I think that the following could be what causes the problems: A. If you pressed Ctrl+Return instead of Return at the end of the "previous page last line", you did not create a new paragraph - the "heading" and your "last line" still make up one paragraph and will thus always have the same paragraph style. B. If you positioned the insertion marker in the start of the heading and pressed Ctrl+Return to insert a page break, the page break will also be applied the heading style. If A and/or B above is correct, you should instead do as follows: A. Always press Return (not Ctrl+Return) to start a new paragraph. B. Do not create page breaks using Ctrl+Return. Instead, click in the paragraph that is to start on a new page. Then select Format Paragraph Line and Page Breaks tab and turn on "Page break before" (then the page break will be an attribute of the paragraph and it will work correctly). However, according to you second post, you may already use this method. I recommend that you turn on nonprinting characters (formatting marks) so that you can see exactly what you have in your document (press Ctrl+Shift+8 or click the ¶ icon on the Standard toolbar). A paragraph mark looks like this: ¶. A manual line break looks like a bent arrow. For further details about formatting marks, see this article: http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/NonPrintChars.htm About columns: If you want the text to start on a new page, use the "Page break before"-method described above. If you want the text to start in the next column, use Insert Break Column break. -- Regards Lene Fredborg DocTools - Denmark www.thedoctools.com Document automation - add-ins, macros and templates for Microsoft Word "jotego" wrote: Also, the "page break before" solution does not work when working with columns. Any idea about how to do it with columns? "jotego" wrote: After inserting a page break, if the new page starts with a heading line then the heading format runs into the previous page last line. This is especially problematic when the heading format includes shading because the last line of the previous page becomes completely shaded. If I try to remove the heading format from the previous page, then the heading line of the new page disappears! This also happens with columns: the heading of a new column line runs into the old one when using the column break. |
#8
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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The solution dosn't help in my case
The solution of adding a hard return before the page break doesn't help me, because my vertical alignment is set as center, and with an extra return I shift the whole page up a bit.
What advice can you give me? (My problem is that on top of every page I placed a certain code and formatted it Hidden, but when I hide hidden characters all pages come together as if I hadn't placed any page breaks. And that's also why the advice of formatting the paragraph as Page Break Before won't help me.) Thanks in advance! Doug Robbins - Word MVP wrote: By hard return, I mean you press the Enter key. 30-Aug-07 By hard return, I mean you press the Enter key. And that definitely does what you want here. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "jotego" wrote in message ... Previous Posts In This Thread: On Monday, August 27, 2007 10:58 PM joteg wrote: After a page break the heading format runs into the previous page After inserting a page break, if the new page starts with a heading line then the heading format runs into the previous page last line. This is especially problematic when the heading format includes shading because the last line of the previous page becomes completely shaded. If I try to remove the heading format from the previous page, then the heading line of the new page disappears! This also happens with columns: the heading of a new column line runs into the old one when using the column break. On Tuesday, August 28, 2007 12:08 AM joteg wrote: Also, the "page break before" solution does not work when working with columns. Also, the "page break before" solution does not work when working with columns. Any idea about how to do it with columns? "jotego" wrote: On Tuesday, August 28, 2007 4:00 AM l wrote: After a page break the heading format runs into the previous p I think that the following could be what causes the problems: A. If you pressed Ctrl+Return instead of Return at the end of the "previous page last line", you did not create a new paragraph - the "heading" and your "last line" still make up one paragraph and will thus always have the same paragraph style. B. If you positioned the insertion marker in the start of the heading and pressed Ctrl+Return to insert a page break, the page break will also be applied the heading style. If A and/or B above is correct, you should instead do as follows: A. Always press Return (not Ctrl+Return) to start a new paragraph. B. Do not create page breaks using Ctrl+Return. Instead, click in the paragraph that is to start on a new page. Then select Format Paragraph Line and Page Breaks tab and turn on "Page break before" (then the page break will be an attribute of the paragraph and it will work correctly). However, according to you second post, you may already use this method. I recommend that you turn on nonprinting characters (formatting marks) so that you can see exactly what you have in your document (press Ctrl+Shift+8 or click the ?? icon on the Standard toolbar). A paragraph mark looks like this: ??. A manual line break looks like a bent arrow. For further details about formatting marks, see this article: http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/NonPrintChars.htm About columns: If you want the text to start on a new page, use the "Page break before"-method described above. If you want the text to start in the next column, use Insert Break Column break. -- Regards Lene Fredborg DocTools - Denmark www.thedoctools.com Document automation - add-ins, macros and templates for Microsoft Word "jotego" wrote: On Tuesday, August 28, 2007 4:10 AM joteg wrote: Thanks a lot for your reply. Thanks a lot for your reply. I always thought that starting a page meant starting a paragraph but I see I was wrong. Creating a new column with the "insert break - column" method does not start a paragraph either so it looks like the only way to have a heading starting a column is to manually press Return as many times as needed. It is odd this has to be done manually though. "Lene Fredborg" wrote: On Tuesday, August 28, 2007 4:36 AM Doug Robbins - Word MVP wrote: NO, you just need a hard return before you insert the column break or the page NO, you just need a hard return before you insert the column break or the page break. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "jotego" wrote in message ... On Thursday, August 30, 2007 1:20 AM joteg wrote: I tried pressing Return and Shift+Return and it did not work. I tried pressing Return and Shift+Return and it did not work. What do you mean by "hard return" and how can it be done? Thank you! "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote: On Thursday, August 30, 2007 5:13 AM Doug Robbins - Word MVP wrote: By hard return, I mean you press the Enter key. By hard return, I mean you press the Enter key. And that definitely does what you want here. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "jotego" wrote in message ... EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice WPF - XAML TabControl MouseEnter TabItem TextBox SelectAll http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...ntrol-mou.aspx |
#9
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The solution dosn't help in my case
Hi LGFN,
Without know the context, it's hard to advise. Instead of telling us something provided for someone else (about which you don't give us enough useful information) doesn't work, perhaps you'd care to share what *your* problem is. -- Cheers macropod [Microsoft MVP - Word] "LGFN" wrote in message ... The solution of adding a hard return before the page break doesn't help me, because my vertical alignment is set as center, and with an extra return I shift the whole page up a bit. What advice can you give me? (My problem is that on top of every page I placed a certain code and formatted it Hidden, but when I hide hidden characters all pages come together as if I hadn't placed any page breaks. And that's also why the advice of formatting the paragraph as Page Break Before won't help me.) Thanks in advance! Doug Robbins - Word MVP wrote: By hard return, I mean you press the Enter key. 30-Aug-07 By hard return, I mean you press the Enter key. And that definitely does what you want here. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "jotego" wrote in message ... Previous Posts In This Thread: On Monday, August 27, 2007 10:58 PM joteg wrote: After a page break the heading format runs into the previous page After inserting a page break, if the new page starts with a heading line then the heading format runs into the previous page last line. This is especially problematic when the heading format includes shading because the last line of the previous page becomes completely shaded. If I try to remove the heading format from the previous page, then the heading line of the new page disappears! This also happens with columns: the heading of a new column line runs into the old one when using the column break. On Tuesday, August 28, 2007 12:08 AM joteg wrote: Also, the "page break before" solution does not work when working with columns. Also, the "page break before" solution does not work when working with columns. Any idea about how to do it with columns? "jotego" wrote: On Tuesday, August 28, 2007 4:00 AM l wrote: After a page break the heading format runs into the previous p I think that the following could be what causes the problems: A. If you pressed Ctrl+Return instead of Return at the end of the "previous page last line", you did not create a new paragraph - the "heading" and your "last line" still make up one paragraph and will thus always have the same paragraph style. B. If you positioned the insertion marker in the start of the heading and pressed Ctrl+Return to insert a page break, the page break will also be applied the heading style. If A and/or B above is correct, you should instead do as follows: A. Always press Return (not Ctrl+Return) to start a new paragraph. B. Do not create page breaks using Ctrl+Return. Instead, click in the paragraph that is to start on a new page. Then select Format Paragraph Line and Page Breaks tab and turn on "Page break before" (then the page break will be an attribute of the paragraph and it will work correctly). However, according to you second post, you may already use this method. I recommend that you turn on nonprinting characters (formatting marks) so that you can see exactly what you have in your document (press Ctrl+Shift+8 or click the ?? icon on the Standard toolbar). A paragraph mark looks like this: ??. A manual line break looks like a bent arrow. For further details about formatting marks, see this article: http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/NonPrintChars.htm About columns: If you want the text to start on a new page, use the "Page break before"-method described above. If you want the text to start in the next column, use Insert Break Column break. -- Regards Lene Fredborg DocTools - Denmark www.thedoctools.com Document automation - add-ins, macros and templates for Microsoft Word "jotego" wrote: On Tuesday, August 28, 2007 4:10 AM joteg wrote: Thanks a lot for your reply. Thanks a lot for your reply. I always thought that starting a page meant starting a paragraph but I see I was wrong. Creating a new column with the "insert break - column" method does not start a paragraph either so it looks like the only way to have a heading starting a column is to manually press Return as many times as needed. It is odd this has to be done manually though. "Lene Fredborg" wrote: On Tuesday, August 28, 2007 4:36 AM Doug Robbins - Word MVP wrote: NO, you just need a hard return before you insert the column break or the page NO, you just need a hard return before you insert the column break or the page break. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "jotego" wrote in message ... On Thursday, August 30, 2007 1:20 AM joteg wrote: I tried pressing Return and Shift+Return and it did not work. I tried pressing Return and Shift+Return and it did not work. What do you mean by "hard return" and how can it be done? Thank you! "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote: On Thursday, August 30, 2007 5:13 AM Doug Robbins - Word MVP wrote: By hard return, I mean you press the Enter key. By hard return, I mean you press the Enter key. And that definitely does what you want here. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "jotego" wrote in message ... EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice WPF - XAML TabControl MouseEnter TabItem TextBox SelectAll http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...ntrol-mou.aspx |
#10
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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The solution dosn't help in my case
One solution might be to have an unhidden return sized to be about a point
high before your hidden text. The page break will then also be about a point high but won't be hidden. (This is a thought experiment, so you'll have to try it.) If you are using W2007in its native mode (not compatibility mode), you shouldn't see this problem because manual page breaks are in their own paragraphs (unless, of course, you remove it). If they do take on the style of the following (or preceding) paragraph, you can change their style. LGFN wrote: The solution of adding a hard return before the page break doesn't help me, because my vertical alignment is set as center, and with an extra return I shift the whole page up a bit. What advice can you give me? (My problem is that on top of every page I placed a certain code and formatted it Hidden, but when I hide hidden characters all pages come together as if I hadn't placed any page breaks. And that's also why the advice of formatting the paragraph as Page Break Before won't help me.) Thanks in advance! By hard return, I mean you press the Enter key. 30-Aug-07 By hard return, I mean you press the Enter key. And that definitely does what you want here. -- Message posted via OfficeKB.com http://www.officekb.com/Uwe/Forums.a...ayout/200911/1 |
#11
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Thank you! But...
Thank you very much! But...
Solution #1, isn't as simple as applying a style to text, as I'm doing it currently, it takes an additional few steps. And I have hundreds and hundreds of pages to apply it to, which can add up fast (or slow...). Solution #2, You're right! I never knew of this! (Seems like Word does implement a change here and there from one version to the next except of GUI... for better or, as in our example, for worse, as follows But by me, as my text is centered vertically, it shifts up all text a bit. Thanks again! and thanks in advance again! Pamelia Caswell via OfficeKB.com wrote: One solution might be to have an unhidden return sized to be about a pointhigh 11-Nov-09 One solution might be to have an unhidden return sized to be about a point high before your hidden text. The page break will then also be about a point high but will not be hidden. (This is a thought experiment, so you will have to try it.) If you are using W2007in its native mode (not compatibility mode), you should not see this problem because manual page breaks are in their own paragraphs (unless, of course, you remove it). If they do take on the style of the following (or preceding) paragraph, you can change their style. LGFN wrote: -- Message posted via OfficeKB.com http://www.officekb.com/Uwe/Forums.a...ayout/200911/1 Previous Posts In This Thread: EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice Anthem.Net AutoSuggestTextBox Redux http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...uggesttex.aspx |
#12
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Thank you! But...
You're welcome. ...I think this change is for the better.
Pam LGFN wrote: Thank you very much! But... Solution #1, isn't as simple as applying a style to text, as I'm doing it currently, it takes an additional few steps. And I have hundreds and hundreds of pages to apply it to, which can add up fast (or slow...). Solution #2, You're right! I never knew of this! (Seems like Word does implement a change here and there from one version to the next except of GUI... for better or, as in our example, for worse, as follows But by me, as my text is centered vertically, it shifts up all text a bit. Thanks again! and thanks in advance again! One solution might be to have an unhidden return sized to be about a pointhigh 11-Nov-09 One solution might be to have an unhidden return sized to be about a poin high before your hidden text. The page break will then also be about a poin high but will not be hidden. (This is a thought experiment, so you will have t try it. If you are using W2007in its native mode (not compatibility mode), yo should not see this problem because manual page breaks are in their ow paragraphs (unless, of course, you remove it). If they do take on the styl of the following (or preceding) paragraph, you can change their style LGFN wrote - Message posted via OfficeKB.co http://www.officekb.com/Uwe/Forums.a...ayout/200911/1 Previous Posts In This Thread: EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice Anthem.Net AutoSuggestTextBox Redux http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...uggesttex.aspx -- Message posted via OfficeKB.com http://www.officekb.com/Uwe/Forums.a...ayout/200911/1 |
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