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Gregg Gregg is offline
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Default 2 sets of type

How do I make a faint image of text, with a bold image of text on top, and be
able to read both sets of type?

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Graham Mayor Graham Mayor is offline
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Posts: 19,312
Default 2 sets of type

Put the background text in a borderless text box. Set the text box wrap to
'behind text', then write over it - or use a watermark.

--

Graham Mayor - Word MVP

My web site www.gmayor.com
Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org



"gregg" wrote in message
...
How do I make a faint image of text, with a bold image of text on top, and
be
able to read both sets of type?



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Graham Mayor Graham Mayor is offline
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Posts: 19,312
Default 2 sets of type


Put the background text in a borderless text box. Set the text box wrap to
'behind text', then write over it - or use a watermark.

--

Graham Mayor - Word MVP

My web site www.gmayor.com
Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org



"gregg" wrote in message
...
How do I make a faint image of text, with a bold image of text on top, and
be
able to read both sets of type?



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Garrystone Garrystone is offline
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Posts: 0
Default

Hi, I would simply use Word Art and add shadow effect to it. you can manipulate the shadow through the shadow effects panel and the Word art can be moved anywhere in your doc, similar to images.

Garry

Quote:
Originally Posted by gregg View Post
How do I make a faint image of text, with a bold image of text on top, and be
able to read both sets of type?
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Jay Freedman Jay Freedman is offline
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Default Replace command in word

First read http://www.gmayor.com/replace_using_wildcards.htm.

Because of a design mistake that Microsoft has never bothered to fix, you're
going to need two separate passes: one for the word by itself and another
for all other forms of the word. (The problem is that the wildcard syntax
allows you to specify "one or more of these characters" but not "zero or
more".)

First do an ordinary replacement -- whether wildcard or not doesn't
matter -- for just the word. In your example, search for "align" and replace
with the formatted word. The code ^& can be used in the Replace With box to
mean "the text found by the search".

Then do a wildcard search for the expression

align[a-z]{1,}

and again replace with the code ^& and the formatting.

--
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.

Garrystone wrote:
Hi, i've been trying to use the replace command in Word,but it isn't
working how I would expect. For instance, if I'm wishing to replace
all instances of the word "align" and any combinations of "align"
such as "alignment" then I assumed I need to select the wild card
option. however, it isn't working correctly. I.e. I wish to replace
any instances of "align" with the same word but formatted differently
(bold, case change, etc). However, Word finds all instances but only
formats the "align" part of the word. So the word "alignment" would
have two formats. Does anybody know a solution it is really annoying
me, I've already spent 2 hours trying to sort it out?

Thanks for your help

Garry





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Jay Freedman Jay Freedman is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 9,854
Default Replace command in word

First read http://www.gmayor.com/replace_using_wildcards.htm.

Because of a design mistake that Microsoft has never bothered to fix, you're
going to need two separate passes: one for the word by itself and another
for all other forms of the word. (The problem is that the wildcard syntax
allows you to specify "one or more of these characters" but not "zero or
more".)

First do an ordinary replacement -- whether wildcard or not doesn't
matter -- for just the word. In your example, search for "align" and replace
with the formatted word. The code ^& can be used in the Replace With box to
mean "the text found by the search".

Then do a wildcard search for the expression

align[a-z]{1,}

and again replace with the code ^& and the formatting.

--
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.

Garrystone wrote:
Hi, i've been trying to use the replace command in Word,but it isn't
working how I would expect. For instance, if I'm wishing to replace
all instances of the word "align" and any combinations of "align"
such as "alignment" then I assumed I need to select the wild card
option. however, it isn't working correctly. I.e. I wish to replace
any instances of "align" with the same word but formatted differently
(bold, case change, etc). However, Word finds all instances but only
formats the "align" part of the word. So the word "alignment" would
have two formats. Does anybody know a solution it is really annoying
me, I've already spent 2 hours trying to sort it out?

Thanks for your help

Garry



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