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#1
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Row height and distribution in Tables
Sorry for the cross-posting, but it doesn't look like the Tables forum is
used much and I'd really like to get some help with this, so I'm posting it in the general forum too. I am trying to put together a table that has one long cell in the right column, and two columns left of there which each have "x" number of rows. In other words, it is as if I have a regular table with a bunch of rows, but the rows of the right-most column are merged. So far so good. The 2 left column cells will be filled in by hand on the printout, and the instructions on how to do this is in the merged cell to the right. The problem is that I can't get the rows in the two left-hand columns to distribute evenly in height. I've tried the small-step advice I've seen here. I've tried using the Cell Formatting button. I've told it to distribute rows evenly while highlighting only those cells. It does the first one or two at a different height and the rest at another height. I test-printed it, and it really does that (it's not just on my screen). I've tried setting the row height specifically to 30pt and made sure the merged cell to the right doesn't have a specified height -- it still doesn't do a consistent height in the rows. I've tried telling it to "distribute rows evenly" -- both with and without specifying the row height -- still won't work. I've tried starting with one row and splitting the two columns into 9 rows each. I've tried starting with 9 rows and merging the right-hand column into one cell. I've tried adding and subtracting rows from the first two columns, thinking it was having trouble sizing itself with the text in the merged cell. Nothing seems to work. And to make matters worse, I have several of these tables to do with varying amounts of text in the right-hand long cell, so I can't even create one table and just copy it for the others. I'll have to tinker with each one, I guess. This is making me nuts! Please, please, can someone help me with this? :-) Jo |
#2
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
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Row height and distribution in Tables
I'd be tempted to try crating a table with three columns, each with x number
of rows. If you need to set the row height do it now. Add whatever text you have into Columns A and B. And when that's done, then I'd merge Column C into one cell. I don't know if that's going to work for you but it's what I'd try. -- JoAnn Paules MVP Microsoft [Publisher] "Jo" wrote in message ... Sorry for the cross-posting, but it doesn't look like the Tables forum is used much and I'd really like to get some help with this, so I'm posting it in the general forum too. I am trying to put together a table that has one long cell in the right column, and two columns left of there which each have "x" number of rows. In other words, it is as if I have a regular table with a bunch of rows, but the rows of the right-most column are merged. So far so good. The 2 left column cells will be filled in by hand on the printout, and the instructions on how to do this is in the merged cell to the right. The problem is that I can't get the rows in the two left-hand columns to distribute evenly in height. I've tried the small-step advice I've seen here. I've tried using the Cell Formatting button. I've told it to distribute rows evenly while highlighting only those cells. It does the first one or two at a different height and the rest at another height. I test-printed it, and it really does that (it's not just on my screen). I've tried setting the row height specifically to 30pt and made sure the merged cell to the right doesn't have a specified height -- it still doesn't do a consistent height in the rows. I've tried telling it to "distribute rows evenly" -- both with and without specifying the row height -- still won't work. I've tried starting with one row and splitting the two columns into 9 rows each. I've tried starting with 9 rows and merging the right-hand column into one cell. I've tried adding and subtracting rows from the first two columns, thinking it was having trouble sizing itself with the text in the merged cell. Nothing seems to work. And to make matters worse, I have several of these tables to do with varying amounts of text in the right-hand long cell, so I can't even create one table and just copy it for the others. I'll have to tinker with each one, I guess. This is making me nuts! Please, please, can someone help me with this? :-) Jo |
#3
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
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Row height and distribution in Tables
Thanks JoAnn, I'll give it a try and let you know. :-)
Jo "JoAnn Paules [MVP]" wrote: I'd be tempted to try crating a table with three columns, each with x number of rows. If you need to set the row height do it now. Add whatever text you have into Columns A and B. And when that's done, then I'd merge Column C into one cell. I don't know if that's going to work for you but it's what I'd try. -- JoAnn Paules MVP Microsoft [Publisher] "Jo" wrote in message ... Sorry for the cross-posting, but it doesn't look like the Tables forum is used much and I'd really like to get some help with this, so I'm posting it in the general forum too. I am trying to put together a table that has one long cell in the right column, and two columns left of there which each have "x" number of rows. In other words, it is as if I have a regular table with a bunch of rows, but the rows of the right-most column are merged. So far so good. The 2 left column cells will be filled in by hand on the printout, and the instructions on how to do this is in the merged cell to the right. The problem is that I can't get the rows in the two left-hand columns to distribute evenly in height. I've tried the small-step advice I've seen here. I've tried using the Cell Formatting button. I've told it to distribute rows evenly while highlighting only those cells. It does the first one or two at a different height and the rest at another height. I test-printed it, and it really does that (it's not just on my screen). I've tried setting the row height specifically to 30pt and made sure the merged cell to the right doesn't have a specified height -- it still doesn't do a consistent height in the rows. I've tried telling it to "distribute rows evenly" -- both with and without specifying the row height -- still won't work. I've tried starting with one row and splitting the two columns into 9 rows each. I've tried starting with 9 rows and merging the right-hand column into one cell. I've tried adding and subtracting rows from the first two columns, thinking it was having trouble sizing itself with the text in the merged cell. Nothing seems to work. And to make matters worse, I have several of these tables to do with varying amounts of text in the right-hand long cell, so I can't even create one table and just copy it for the others. I'll have to tinker with each one, I guess. This is making me nuts! Please, please, can someone help me with this? :-) Jo |
#4
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
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Row height and distribution in Tables
I wanted to let you (and other readers) know that your suggestion seems to
have worked! :-) So far so good! (keeping fingers crossed) Thanks JoAnn. Jo ------------------------------------ "JoAnn Paules [MVP]" wrote: I'd be tempted to try crating a table with three columns, each with x number of rows. If you need to set the row height do it now. Add whatever text you have into Columns A and B. And when that's done, then I'd merge Column C into one cell. I don't know if that's going to work for you but it's what I'd try. -- JoAnn Paules MVP Microsoft [Publisher] "Jo" wrote in message ... Sorry for the cross-posting, but it doesn't look like the Tables forum is used much and I'd really like to get some help with this, so I'm posting it in the general forum too. I am trying to put together a table that has one long cell in the right column, and two columns left of there which each have "x" number of rows. In other words, it is as if I have a regular table with a bunch of rows, but the rows of the right-most column are merged. So far so good. The 2 left column cells will be filled in by hand on the printout, and the instructions on how to do this is in the merged cell to the right. The problem is that I can't get the rows in the two left-hand columns to distribute evenly in height. I've tried the small-step advice I've seen here. I've tried using the Cell Formatting button. I've told it to distribute rows evenly while highlighting only those cells. It does the first one or two at a different height and the rest at another height. I test-printed it, and it really does that (it's not just on my screen). I've tried setting the row height specifically to 30pt and made sure the merged cell to the right doesn't have a specified height -- it still doesn't do a consistent height in the rows. I've tried telling it to "distribute rows evenly" -- both with and without specifying the row height -- still won't work. I've tried starting with one row and splitting the two columns into 9 rows each. I've tried starting with 9 rows and merging the right-hand column into one cell. I've tried adding and subtracting rows from the first two columns, thinking it was having trouble sizing itself with the text in the merged cell. Nothing seems to work. And to make matters worse, I have several of these tables to do with varying amounts of text in the right-hand long cell, so I can't even create one table and just copy it for the others. I'll have to tinker with each one, I guess. This is making me nuts! Please, please, can someone help me with this? :-) Jo |
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