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#1
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Is a section break the same as a manual page break?
-- AKS |
#2
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No, in a number of ways.
A section break can be continuous so that it does not force a new page, but more importantly, there are a number of features (headers, footers, margins, vertical alignment, page numbering, etc) that are properties of sections and can be made to apply just to an individual section. -- 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 wrote in message ... Is a section break the same as a manual page break? -- AKS |
#3
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Thank you, Doug. I appreciate the response. I am not sure what you mean by
responding to the newsgroup...nevertheless, I value your answer, sir. -- AKS "Doug Robbins" wrote: No, in a number of ways. A section break can be continuous so that it does not force a new page, but more importantly, there are a number of features (headers, footers, margins, vertical alignment, page numbering, etc) that are properties of sections and can be made to apply just to an individual section. -- 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 wrote in message ... Is a section break the same as a manual page break? -- AKS |
#4
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Dear AKS,
As Doug says, the choice between Page Break and Section Break (mainly) concerns the settings in Page Setup. I notice that your post is under the New User category so allow me to give you some detailed pointers. When you come to the Page Break/Section Break question, ask yourself this: €śDo I want to start a new page where all the page settings (margins, headers, etc.) are the same?€ť If you answer €śyes€ť you need a Page Break. If you answer €śno€ť you need a Section Break. As an example: you may need to include a very wide table in your document. You can see that theres no way it will fit within the current page width. So you take these actions: 1. Insert a Section Break (choose Next page) 2. Go into Page Setup and switch to Landscape 3. Check under €śApply to:€ť to make sure €śThis section€ť is indicated (usually it will be) 4. Create your table When you have finished your table: Repeat the above switching back to Portrait at step 2. Section Break (Continuous) is another good example to describe the versatility of Section Breaks. Rather than starting a new page with a different layout (as above), Continuous lets you have several layouts on one page (hence, €ścontinuous€ť). Example: Lets say that you have a €śnewspaper€ť type document (perhaps a flyer) where the page is mainly 2-column format BUT €¦ there is a paragraph of text at the top that follows the normal page widths. So, you would do this: 1. Type your paragraph text 2. Insert a Section Break (Continuous) 3. Select 2-column format 4. Type your columns If, for any reason, you needed to switch back to the normal page width 5. Insert another Section Break (Continuous) 6. Switch back to 1-column and continue Hope that helps. These are only the broad strokes €“ Im sure (in fact, I know!) that when you start working with Section Breaks youll have more questions but it should set you on the right path. :-) -- Sharon Roffey "A little knowledge goes a long way ... a lot of knowledge goes even further!" " wrote: Is a section break the same as a manual page break? -- AKS |
#5
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Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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![]() "Doug Robbins" wrote: No, in a number of ways. A section break can be continuous so that it does not force a new page, but more importantly, there are a number of features (headers, footers, margins, vertical alignment, page numbering, etc) that are properties of sections and can be made to apply just to an individual section. -- 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 wrote in message ... Is a section break the same as a manual page break? -- AKS |
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