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#1
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Hello,
I am using Word 2003 at the moment, with the standard and formatting toolbars on the same line. Even at a resolution of 1280x1024 there are a number of icons which fall off the end of the toolbar. Under Word 2000 if memory serves, the application just drops the buttons to the right hand side of the toolbar and offers you them in a dropdown. Word 2003 decides which ones to drop, presumably according to usage data. I've never liked the tendency of recent Office products to drop icons or menu-items according to their frequency of use; I find it patronising, and it really gets in the way of locating the items you're looking for, since most people do this contextually. If the context is always changing, or the item you need is prone to disappear, it is infuriating. I know of nobody who has used Word seriously who has this function switched on, and fortunately you can easily turn it off, which is the first job to be done after a new install. However, there seems to be no option to prevent toolbar juggling in the event of the toolbar running out of space. TBH it should obey the master 'always show full menus' switch, but it doesn't. Does anyone know of a registry setting which will correct this issue? I did think it might be possible to locate where the usage data is stored (if it is in a file), reset it and then write-protect it to stop Word from juggling my menus, but I'm not sure where to look for that either. Thanks in advance for any help. |
#2
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Hi John
All you need to do is: 1. Right click a toolbar 2. Select Customize from the toolbars list Result: Customize dialog is displayed 3. Click the Options tab 4. Uncheck the radio buttons in the 'Personalized Menus and Toolbars' section 5. Click 'Close' button All being well you should have the desired results. Alex "John Swire" wrote: Hello, I am using Word 2003 at the moment, with the standard and formatting toolbars on the same line. Even at a resolution of 1280x1024 there are a number of icons which fall off the end of the toolbar. Under Word 2000 if memory serves, the application just drops the buttons to the right hand side of the toolbar and offers you them in a dropdown. Word 2003 decides which ones to drop, presumably according to usage data. I've never liked the tendency of recent Office products to drop icons or menu-items according to their frequency of use; I find it patronising, and it really gets in the way of locating the items you're looking for, since most people do this contextually. If the context is always changing, or the item you need is prone to disappear, it is infuriating. I know of nobody who has used Word seriously who has this function switched on, and fortunately you can easily turn it off, which is the first job to be done after a new install. However, there seems to be no option to prevent toolbar juggling in the event of the toolbar running out of space. TBH it should obey the master 'always show full menus' switch, but it doesn't. Does anyone know of a registry setting which will correct this issue? I did think it might be possible to locate where the usage data is stored (if it is in a file), reset it and then write-protect it to stop Word from juggling my menus, but I'm not sure where to look for that either. Thanks in advance for any help. |
#3
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Hi John-
While following Al's excellent suggestin you might wat to explore the Customize capability even further and create your own toolbars that give you exactly what you want when you want it. Regards |:) "John Swire" wrote: Hello, I am using Word 2003 at the moment, with the standard and formatting toolbars on the same line. Even at a resolution of 1280x1024 there are a number of icons which fall off the end of the toolbar. Under Word 2000 if memory serves, the application just drops the buttons to the right hand side of the toolbar and offers you them in a dropdown. Word 2003 decides which ones to drop, presumably according to usage data. I've never liked the tendency of recent Office products to drop icons or menu-items according to their frequency of use; I find it patronising, and it really gets in the way of locating the items you're looking for, since most people do this contextually. If the context is always changing, or the item you need is prone to disappear, it is infuriating. I know of nobody who has used Word seriously who has this function switched on, and fortunately you can easily turn it off, which is the first job to be done after a new install. However, there seems to be no option to prevent toolbar juggling in the event of the toolbar running out of space. TBH it should obey the master 'always show full menus' switch, but it doesn't. Does anyone know of a registry setting which will correct this issue? I did think it might be possible to locate where the usage data is stored (if it is in a file), reset it and then write-protect it to stop Word from juggling my menus, but I'm not sure where to look for that either. Thanks in advance for any help. |
#4
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Hi John
If you do experiment with customising your toolbars (excellent suggestion CyberTaz), have a good look at the 'All Commands' category within the commands tab. What you will notice is alot of commands previously used in earlier versions of Word are stored here, i.e. the Insert table button that displayed a grid for you to select the required number of rows and columns (as used in Word 97) can be found here and used in Word 2000, XP and 2003. It's a long list to go through but well worth it. Have fun playing Alex "CyberTaz" wrote: Hi John- While following Al's excellent suggestin you might wat to explore the Customize capability even further and create your own toolbars that give you exactly what you want when you want it. Regards |:) "John Swire" wrote: Hello, I am using Word 2003 at the moment, with the standard and formatting toolbars on the same line. Even at a resolution of 1280x1024 there are a number of icons which fall off the end of the toolbar. Under Word 2000 if memory serves, the application just drops the buttons to the right hand side of the toolbar and offers you them in a dropdown. Word 2003 decides which ones to drop, presumably according to usage data. I've never liked the tendency of recent Office products to drop icons or menu-items according to their frequency of use; I find it patronising, and it really gets in the way of locating the items you're looking for, since most people do this contextually. If the context is always changing, or the item you need is prone to disappear, it is infuriating. I know of nobody who has used Word seriously who has this function switched on, and fortunately you can easily turn it off, which is the first job to be done after a new install. However, there seems to be no option to prevent toolbar juggling in the event of the toolbar running out of space. TBH it should obey the master 'always show full menus' switch, but it doesn't. Does anyone know of a registry setting which will correct this issue? I did think it might be possible to locate where the usage data is stored (if it is in a file), reset it and then write-protect it to stop Word from juggling my menus, but I'm not sure where to look for that either. Thanks in advance for any help. |
#5
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The best way to make Word show all your toolbar buttons, though, is not to
try to combine two toolbars on one row. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Al" wrote in message ... Hi John If you do experiment with customising your toolbars (excellent suggestion CyberTaz), have a good look at the 'All Commands' category within the commands tab. What you will notice is alot of commands previously used in earlier versions of Word are stored here, i.e. the Insert table button that displayed a grid for you to select the required number of rows and columns (as used in Word 97) can be found here and used in Word 2000, XP and 2003. It's a long list to go through but well worth it. Have fun playing Alex "CyberTaz" wrote: Hi John- While following Al's excellent suggestin you might wat to explore the Customize capability even further and create your own toolbars that give you exactly what you want when you want it. Regards |:) "John Swire" wrote: Hello, I am using Word 2003 at the moment, with the standard and formatting toolbars on the same line. Even at a resolution of 1280x1024 there are a number of icons which fall off the end of the toolbar. Under Word 2000 if memory serves, the application just drops the buttons to the right hand side of the toolbar and offers you them in a dropdown. Word 2003 decides which ones to drop, presumably according to usage data. I've never liked the tendency of recent Office products to drop icons or menu-items according to their frequency of use; I find it patronising, and it really gets in the way of locating the items you're looking for, since most people do this contextually. If the context is always changing, or the item you need is prone to disappear, it is infuriating. I know of nobody who has used Word seriously who has this function switched on, and fortunately you can easily turn it off, which is the first job to be done after a new install. However, there seems to be no option to prevent toolbar juggling in the event of the toolbar running out of space. TBH it should obey the master 'always show full menus' switch, but it doesn't. Does anyone know of a registry setting which will correct this issue? I did think it might be possible to locate where the usage data is stored (if it is in a file), reset it and then write-protect it to stop Word from juggling my menus, but I'm not sure where to look for that either. Thanks in advance for any help. |
#6
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Hi Al, thanks for taking the time to try and help me. Your advice, though
promising, did not solve my problem. "Al" wrote: Hi John All you need to do is: 1. Right click a toolbar 2. Select Customize from the toolbars list Result: Customize dialog is displayed 3. Click the Options tab 4. Uncheck the radio buttons in the 'Personalized Menus and Toolbars' section The options here a Show standard and formatting toolbars on two rows - which I already had unchecked, because I like to maximise the screen space given to the document I am editing, and minimise the space given to Word's UI. Always show full menus - I keep this checked because I don't like the 'cut-off' menus. Unchecking it would not solve my problem. Unchecking it and clearing my usage data does not correct my problem, either. Neither of these really addresses my problem which is this: I don't like personalised toolbars, but if any toolbar runs off the screen, it becomes a personalised toolbar however you have it configured. Under Word 2000, the simpler (and context preserving) mechanic of placing all the buttons which would have otherwise fallen off the screen (or outside the window) due to their location in the dropdown. Really I am just looking for a way of compelling Word 2003 to function in a similar way to the way it has done in previous versions, so that I don't have continually have menu items jumping to and fro between the dropdown and the visible toolbar. they may well settle down as more usage data is applied, but they are likely to result in an illogical order, (for example right align and justify become divorced from centre and left align, where they really belong, even though I don't use them very often) If you take a toolbar in Word 2000 and progressively push it off the right hand side of the screen, you see the icons disappear in the order they leave the screen. If you do the same in 2003, you see them disappear in an almost random order, determined by how many times they have been clicked. I think that the first behaviour is actually the more intuitive. Anyway, thanks for taking the time to help me, but I'm rapidly coming to the conclusion that this is simply new default behaviour which I am going to have to learn to live with - I can't reasonably revert to Office 2000, my preference, because all of my colleagues are now on 2003. |
#7
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Thanks to all for the helpful suggestions regarding customisation of the
toolbars in the thread. Unfortunately, what I am trying to do is escape customisation! ![]() I appreciate that dynamic toolbars and menus are a great feature for people who are overwhelmed by options and only use a limited subset of the capacity offered by the software. But my preference is to be able to use contextual cues to find options; so I know that 'Insert Picture' is about three fifths of the way down the 'Insert' menu, between 'web component' and 'diagram'. Before long it becomes instinct, and options being removed changes the location of options so that you can no longer work instinctively. As such establishing a subset of the functions to place on a foreshortened menu doesn't really appeal to me as a solution; I have established that I use most of the buttons in the menu, and those which I use infrequently are used as navigation beacons for the ones I do. To cut the toolbar down to size like this I will in effect be doing manually what Word is doing automatically; reducing my easily accessible options to the ones I use most frequently, as opposed to all of those available.. I'm also aware that making the toolbars occupy two lines of my display and eat a bit of my document viewing space is a quick fix which will apparently solve my problem. But I want my formatting bar to the right of my standard toolbar because after five years of it living there and behaving in a certain way, for me that's where it 'belongs'. You can call me set in my ways, or ask me to move with the times, but I think that this small, but arbitrary and inconsistent change to the behaviour of an established function is not an improvement ![]() Thanks again for all the help offered and sorry to counter your kind suggestions with dull and wordy moans ![]() |
#8
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Your question asked about toolbars, not menus, which is why you did not get
the answer you needed. 1. If this is Word 2000, on the Options tab of Tools | Customize, clear the check box for "Menus show recently used items first." 2. For Word 2002 or 2003, check the box for "Always show full menus." -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "John Swire" wrote in message ... Thanks to all for the helpful suggestions regarding customisation of the toolbars in the thread. Unfortunately, what I am trying to do is escape customisation! ![]() I appreciate that dynamic toolbars and menus are a great feature for people who are overwhelmed by options and only use a limited subset of the capacity offered by the software. But my preference is to be able to use contextual cues to find options; so I know that 'Insert Picture' is about three fifths of the way down the 'Insert' menu, between 'web component' and 'diagram'. Before long it becomes instinct, and options being removed changes the location of options so that you can no longer work instinctively. As such establishing a subset of the functions to place on a foreshortened menu doesn't really appeal to me as a solution; I have established that I use most of the buttons in the menu, and those which I use infrequently are used as navigation beacons for the ones I do. To cut the toolbar down to size like this I will in effect be doing manually what Word is doing automatically; reducing my easily accessible options to the ones I use most frequently, as opposed to all of those available.. I'm also aware that making the toolbars occupy two lines of my display and eat a bit of my document viewing space is a quick fix which will apparently solve my problem. But I want my formatting bar to the right of my standard toolbar because after five years of it living there and behaving in a certain way, for me that's where it 'belongs'. You can call me set in my ways, or ask me to move with the times, but I think that this small, but arbitrary and inconsistent change to the behaviour of an established function is not an improvement ![]() Thanks again for all the help offered and sorry to counter your kind suggestions with dull and wordy moans ![]() |
#9
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Hi John
Apologies for misreading your original post, if I understand you it's not dynamic menus you want to fix, it's dynamic toolbars? From various MVP articles I've read in the past (and please VBA gods help me out here), it might be possible to attain the desired result by changing the commandbar priority for each toolbar using VBA. The control.priority settings (if i remember correctly), dictate whether or not buttons can be dropped off the toolbar as the screen resizes and the toolbar runs out of space. Maybe one of the nice VBA gods reading these posts can come up with an appropriate bit of code that could be inserted into an AutoExec or AutoOpen or AutoNew macro? Hope this at least points you in the right direction Alex "John Swire" wrote: Hi Al, thanks for taking the time to try and help me. Your advice, though promising, did not solve my problem. "Al" wrote: Hi John All you need to do is: 1. Right click a toolbar 2. Select Customize from the toolbars list Result: Customize dialog is displayed 3. Click the Options tab 4. Uncheck the radio buttons in the 'Personalized Menus and Toolbars' section The options here a Show standard and formatting toolbars on two rows - which I already had unchecked, because I like to maximise the screen space given to the document I am editing, and minimise the space given to Word's UI. Always show full menus - I keep this checked because I don't like the 'cut-off' menus. Unchecking it would not solve my problem. Unchecking it and clearing my usage data does not correct my problem, either. Neither of these really addresses my problem which is this: I don't like personalised toolbars, but if any toolbar runs off the screen, it becomes a personalised toolbar however you have it configured. Under Word 2000, the simpler (and context preserving) mechanic of placing all the buttons which would have otherwise fallen off the screen (or outside the window) due to their location in the dropdown. Really I am just looking for a way of compelling Word 2003 to function in a similar way to the way it has done in previous versions, so that I don't have continually have menu items jumping to and fro between the dropdown and the visible toolbar. they may well settle down as more usage data is applied, but they are likely to result in an illogical order, (for example right align and justify become divorced from centre and left align, where they really belong, even though I don't use them very often) If you take a toolbar in Word 2000 and progressively push it off the right hand side of the screen, you see the icons disappear in the order they leave the screen. If you do the same in 2003, you see them disappear in an almost random order, determined by how many times they have been clicked. I think that the first behaviour is actually the more intuitive. Anyway, thanks for taking the time to help me, but I'm rapidly coming to the conclusion that this is simply new default behaviour which I am going to have to learn to live with - I can't reasonably revert to Office 2000, my preference, because all of my colleagues are now on 2003. |
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