Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi,
I am having trouble with incomplete borders (using Word 2002 SP3 on WinXpProf SP2). I put some borders around a paragraph that is in a table cell (not around the cell itself!). The rest of the table has no borders. Sometime the border of the paragraph is a complete box with four similar sides, and sometimes the right side border of the box is missing, and the left side border is only half the width. I found some sort of solution, but I would like to know if there is an explanation that can help me do things easier. You can reproduce an example of my problem like this: 1: incomplete border: Insert a table. Select the table and turn off al the borders. Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. The border around the paragraph is incomplete. 2: complete border: Insert a table. (Do NOT change the table borders right now). Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. NOW select the whole table, and turn off all table borders. The border around the paragraph remains complete. This is a trial and error solution, which has the problem that I have a lot of tables that already have their borders turned off. I want to apply some borders around paragraphs in those tables, but end up with them incomplete, or have to rebuild the tables. I suspect that there is a difference somewhere in the properties of both tables, and maybe I can edit that afterwards, so I can fix the borders in the borderless tables. Any ideas greatly appreciated! Jeroen Verburg |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi J.,
Do the borders print correctly? There can be some display issues with this in print preview and in print layout view depending on how much of the text you're boxing in and it's relation to the edge of the cells. In some cases changing the cell margins in Table=Properties will help in others changing to a different printer driver for testing will work. The workaround you listed may not always work unfortunately and may not produce the same results if the same file is opened by another person on another computer. (Word 2003 has the same issue, although not as often). Do you have a URL for a Word created webpage or a .doc file download that shows the problem? ========= "J. Verburg" wrote in message ... Hi, I am having trouble with incomplete borders (using Word 2002 SP3 on WinXpProf SP2). I put some borders around a paragraph that is in a table cell (not around the cell itself!). The rest of the table has no borders. Sometime the border of the paragraph is a complete box with four similar sides, and sometimes the right side border of the box is missing, and the left side border is only half the width. I found some sort of solution, but I would like to know if there is an explanation that can help me do things easier. You can reproduce an example of my problem like this: 1: incomplete border: Insert a table. Select the table and turn off al the borders. Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. The border around the paragraph is incomplete. 2: complete border: Insert a table. (Do NOT change the table borders right now). Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. NOW select the whole table, and turn off all table borders. The border around the paragraph remains complete. This is a trial and error solution, which has the problem that I have a lot of tables that already have their borders turned off. I want to apply some borders around paragraphs in those tables, but end up with them incomplete, or have to rebuild the tables. I suspect that there is a difference somewhere in the properties of both tables, and maybe I can edit that afterwards, so I can fix the borders in the borderless tables. Any ideas greatly appreciated! Jeroen Verburg -- Let us know if this helped you, Bob Buckland ?:-) MS Office System Products MVP *Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends* For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" - http://microsoft.com/events/series/a...andtricks.mspx |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Bob,
Thanks for thinking along. The borders do not print correctly either. I have uploaded the (small) file I used for testing at this location: http://www.knuffelkwijtsijt.nl/dump/feest.doc The bottom two tables are the ones to look at. They show the result of first the uncorrect box, and then the correct box. I looked into the paragraph style of both cells as well, and there a difference shows up.The incorrect box mentions the border as being a box or something, and the correct one mentions each side separately. Yet when I mark each side seperately (using the INcorrect way i described earlier, it still ends up as the box-like style. (I hope I am making sense here, I do not have the right Word-version here at home.) Jeroen "Bob Buckland ?:-)" 75214.226(At Beautiful Downtown)compuserve.com schreef in bericht ... Hi J., Do the borders print correctly? There can be some display issues with this in print preview and in print layout view depending on how much of the text you're boxing in and it's relation to the edge of the cells. In some cases changing the cell margins in Table=Properties will help in others changing to a different printer driver for testing will work. The workaround you listed may not always work unfortunately and may not produce the same results if the same file is opened by another person on another computer. (Word 2003 has the same issue, although not as often). Do you have a URL for a Word created webpage or a .doc file download that shows the problem? ========= "J. Verburg" wrote in message ... Hi, I am having trouble with incomplete borders (using Word 2002 SP3 on WinXpProf SP2). I put some borders around a paragraph that is in a table cell (not around the cell itself!). The rest of the table has no borders. Sometime the border of the paragraph is a complete box with four similar sides, and sometimes the right side border of the box is missing, and the left side border is only half the width. I found some sort of solution, but I would like to know if there is an explanation that can help me do things easier. You can reproduce an example of my problem like this: 1: incomplete border: Insert a table. Select the table and turn off al the borders. Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. The border around the paragraph is incomplete. 2: complete border: Insert a table. (Do NOT change the table borders right now). Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. NOW select the whole table, and turn off all table borders. The border around the paragraph remains complete. This is a trial and error solution, which has the problem that I have a lot of tables that already have their borders turned off. I want to apply some borders around paragraphs in those tables, but end up with them incomplete, or have to rebuild the tables. I suspect that there is a difference somewhere in the properties of both tables, and maybe I can edit that afterwards, so I can fix the borders in the borderless tables. Any ideas greatly appreciated! Jeroen Verburg -- Let us know if this helped you, Bob Buckland ?:-) MS Office System Products MVP *Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends* For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" - http://microsoft.com/events/series/a...andtricks.mspx |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Does decreasing the distance between borders and text make a difference?
Here's how: In the Borders and Shading dialog box, click the Borders tab, and then click Options. At "From text", specify zero for Top, Left, Bottom, and Right. Other things to test: Add left and right indents, and/or spacing before or after, to the paragraphs, and see if that helps. (The idea is to get a distance between cell boundaries and paragraph borders.) In my version (Word 2000) the above suggestions improves the situation, but I wouldn't say that it seems to work correctly (or even that the result is predictable). So perhaps using cell borders and living with their limitations is the only choice, after all. :-( -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "J. Verburg" wrote in message . nl... Hi Bob, Thanks for thinking along. The borders do not print correctly either. I have uploaded the (small) file I used for testing at this location: http://www.knuffelkwijtsijt.nl/dump/feest.doc The bottom two tables are the ones to look at. They show the result of first the uncorrect box, and then the correct box. I looked into the paragraph style of both cells as well, and there a difference shows up.The incorrect box mentions the border as being a box or something, and the correct one mentions each side separately. Yet when I mark each side seperately (using the INcorrect way i described earlier, it still ends up as the box-like style. (I hope I am making sense here, I do not have the right Word-version here at home.) Jeroen "Bob Buckland ?:-)" 75214.226(At Beautiful Downtown)compuserve.com schreef in bericht ... Hi J., Do the borders print correctly? There can be some display issues with this in print preview and in print layout view depending on how much of the text you're boxing in and it's relation to the edge of the cells. In some cases changing the cell margins in Table=Properties will help in others changing to a different printer driver for testing will work. The workaround you listed may not always work unfortunately and may not produce the same results if the same file is opened by another person on another computer. (Word 2003 has the same issue, although not as often). Do you have a URL for a Word created webpage or a .doc file download that shows the problem? ========= "J. Verburg" wrote in message ... Hi, I am having trouble with incomplete borders (using Word 2002 SP3 on WinXpProf SP2). I put some borders around a paragraph that is in a table cell (not around the cell itself!). The rest of the table has no borders. Sometime the border of the paragraph is a complete box with four similar sides, and sometimes the right side border of the box is missing, and the left side border is only half the width. I found some sort of solution, but I would like to know if there is an explanation that can help me do things easier. You can reproduce an example of my problem like this: 1: incomplete border: Insert a table. Select the table and turn off al the borders. Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. The border around the paragraph is incomplete. 2: complete border: Insert a table. (Do NOT change the table borders right now). Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. NOW select the whole table, and turn off all table borders. The border around the paragraph remains complete. This is a trial and error solution, which has the problem that I have a lot of tables that already have their borders turned off. I want to apply some borders around paragraphs in those tables, but end up with them incomplete, or have to rebuild the tables. I suspect that there is a difference somewhere in the properties of both tables, and maybe I can edit that afterwards, so I can fix the borders in the borderless tables. Any ideas greatly appreciated! Jeroen Verburg -- Let us know if this helped you, Bob Buckland ?:-) MS Office System Products MVP *Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends* For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" - http://microsoft.com/events/series/a...andtricks.mspx |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I think I have tried everything, even using the Equation Editor to create
lines around the text (as suggested at mvps.org ). In the end the best solution was to add a very thin row (height 0,05 cm) below the bordered cell. This 'catches' the bottom border of that top row from spilling to the next page, as long as I mark the top row to keep with the next paragraph. I would rather not have any 'strange' items in a document that others have to use regularly, to prevent users from meddling with what should be left alone, but I think this will not cause big problems. Thanks for all the suggestions. Hope this workaround can be of use to others too. Jeroen "Stefan Blom" schreef in bericht ... Does decreasing the distance between borders and text make a difference? Here's how: In the Borders and Shading dialog box, click the Borders tab, and then click Options. At "From text", specify zero for Top, Left, Bottom, and Right. Other things to test: Add left and right indents, and/or spacing before or after, to the paragraphs, and see if that helps. (The idea is to get a distance between cell boundaries and paragraph borders.) In my version (Word 2000) the above suggestions improves the situation, but I wouldn't say that it seems to work correctly (or even that the result is predictable). So perhaps using cell borders and living with their limitations is the only choice, after all. :-( -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "J. Verburg" wrote in message . nl... Hi Bob, Thanks for thinking along. The borders do not print correctly either. I have uploaded the (small) file I used for testing at this location: http://www.knuffelkwijtsijt.nl/dump/feest.doc The bottom two tables are the ones to look at. They show the result of first the uncorrect box, and then the correct box. I looked into the paragraph style of both cells as well, and there a difference shows up.The incorrect box mentions the border as being a box or something, and the correct one mentions each side separately. Yet when I mark each side seperately (using the INcorrect way i described earlier, it still ends up as the box-like style. (I hope I am making sense here, I do not have the right Word-version here at home.) Jeroen "Bob Buckland ?:-)" 75214.226(At Beautiful Downtown)compuserve.com schreef in bericht ... Hi J., Do the borders print correctly? There can be some display issues with this in print preview and in print layout view depending on how much of the text you're boxing in and it's relation to the edge of the cells. In some cases changing the cell margins in Table=Properties will help in others changing to a different printer driver for testing will work. The workaround you listed may not always work unfortunately and may not produce the same results if the same file is opened by another person on another computer. (Word 2003 has the same issue, although not as often). Do you have a URL for a Word created webpage or a .doc file download that shows the problem? ========= "J. Verburg" wrote in message ... Hi, I am having trouble with incomplete borders (using Word 2002 SP3 on WinXpProf SP2). I put some borders around a paragraph that is in a table cell (not around the cell itself!). The rest of the table has no borders. Sometime the border of the paragraph is a complete box with four similar sides, and sometimes the right side border of the box is missing, and the left side border is only half the width. I found some sort of solution, but I would like to know if there is an explanation that can help me do things easier. You can reproduce an example of my problem like this: 1: incomplete border: Insert a table. Select the table and turn off al the borders. Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. The border around the paragraph is incomplete. 2: complete border: Insert a table. (Do NOT change the table borders right now). Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. NOW select the whole table, and turn off all table borders. The border around the paragraph remains complete. This is a trial and error solution, which has the problem that I have a lot of tables that already have their borders turned off. I want to apply some borders around paragraphs in those tables, but end up with them incomplete, or have to rebuild the tables. I suspect that there is a difference somewhere in the properties of both tables, and maybe I can edit that afterwards, so I can fix the borders in the borderless tables. Any ideas greatly appreciated! Jeroen Verburg -- Let us know if this helped you, Bob Buckland ?:-) MS Office System Products MVP *Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends* For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" - http://microsoft.com/events/series/a...andtricks.mspx |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
An empty row? Isn't that cheating? g Seriously, I'm glad to learn that
you found a solution! -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "J. Verburg" skrev i meddelandet . nl... I think I have tried everything, even using the Equation Editor to create lines around the text (as suggested at mvps.org ). In the end the best solution was to add a very thin row (height 0,05 cm) below the bordered cell. This 'catches' the bottom border of that top row from spilling to the next page, as long as I mark the top row to keep with the next paragraph. I would rather not have any 'strange' items in a document that others have to use regularly, to prevent users from meddling with what should be left alone, but I think this will not cause big problems. Thanks for all the suggestions. Hope this workaround can be of use to others too. Jeroen "Stefan Blom" schreef in bericht ... Does decreasing the distance between borders and text make a difference? Here's how: In the Borders and Shading dialog box, click the Borders tab, and then click Options. At "From text", specify zero for Top, Left, Bottom, and Right. Other things to test: Add left and right indents, and/or spacing before or after, to the paragraphs, and see if that helps. (The idea is to get a distance between cell boundaries and paragraph borders.) In my version (Word 2000) the above suggestions improves the situation, but I wouldn't say that it seems to work correctly (or even that the result is predictable). So perhaps using cell borders and living with their limitations is the only choice, after all. :-( -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "J. Verburg" wrote in message . nl... Hi Bob, Thanks for thinking along. The borders do not print correctly either. I have uploaded the (small) file I used for testing at this location: http://www.knuffelkwijtsijt.nl/dump/feest.doc The bottom two tables are the ones to look at. They show the result of first the uncorrect box, and then the correct box. I looked into the paragraph style of both cells as well, and there a difference shows up.The incorrect box mentions the border as being a box or something, and the correct one mentions each side separately. Yet when I mark each side seperately (using the INcorrect way i described earlier, it still ends up as the box-like style. (I hope I am making sense here, I do not have the right Word-version here at home.) Jeroen "Bob Buckland ?:-)" 75214.226(At Beautiful Downtown)compuserve.com schreef in bericht ... Hi J., Do the borders print correctly? There can be some display issues with this in print preview and in print layout view depending on how much of the text you're boxing in and it's relation to the edge of the cells. In some cases changing the cell margins in Table=Properties will help in others changing to a different printer driver for testing will work. The workaround you listed may not always work unfortunately and may not produce the same results if the same file is opened by another person on another computer. (Word 2003 has the same issue, although not as often). Do you have a URL for a Word created webpage or a .doc file download that shows the problem? ========= "J. Verburg" wrote in message ... Hi, I am having trouble with incomplete borders (using Word 2002 SP3 on WinXpProf SP2). I put some borders around a paragraph that is in a table cell (not around the cell itself!). The rest of the table has no borders. Sometime the border of the paragraph is a complete box with four similar sides, and sometimes the right side border of the box is missing, and the left side border is only half the width. I found some sort of solution, but I would like to know if there is an explanation that can help me do things easier. You can reproduce an example of my problem like this: 1: incomplete border: Insert a table. Select the table and turn off al the borders. Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. The border around the paragraph is incomplete. 2: complete border: Insert a table. (Do NOT change the table borders right now). Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. NOW select the whole table, and turn off all table borders. The border around the paragraph remains complete. This is a trial and error solution, which has the problem that I have a lot of tables that already have their borders turned off. I want to apply some borders around paragraphs in those tables, but end up with them incomplete, or have to rebuild the tables. I suspect that there is a difference somewhere in the properties of both tables, and maybe I can edit that afterwards, so I can fix the borders in the borderless tables. Any ideas greatly appreciated! Jeroen Verburg -- Let us know if this helped you, Bob Buckland ?:-) MS Office System Products MVP *Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends* For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" - http://microsoft.com/events/series/a...andtricks.mspx |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
'Cheat' is my middle name. It's better for my teeth and hair as well...
Jeroen 'Cheat' Verburg "Stefan Blom" schreef in bericht ... An empty row? Isn't that cheating? g Seriously, I'm glad to learn that you found a solution! -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "J. Verburg" skrev i meddelandet . nl... I think I have tried everything, even using the Equation Editor to create lines around the text (as suggested at mvps.org ). In the end the best solution was to add a very thin row (height 0,05 cm) below the bordered cell. This 'catches' the bottom border of that top row from spilling to the next page, as long as I mark the top row to keep with the next paragraph. I would rather not have any 'strange' items in a document that others have to use regularly, to prevent users from meddling with what should be left alone, but I think this will not cause big problems. Thanks for all the suggestions. Hope this workaround can be of use to others too. Jeroen "Stefan Blom" schreef in bericht ... Does decreasing the distance between borders and text make a difference? Here's how: In the Borders and Shading dialog box, click the Borders tab, and then click Options. At "From text", specify zero for Top, Left, Bottom, and Right. Other things to test: Add left and right indents, and/or spacing before or after, to the paragraphs, and see if that helps. (The idea is to get a distance between cell boundaries and paragraph borders.) In my version (Word 2000) the above suggestions improves the situation, but I wouldn't say that it seems to work correctly (or even that the result is predictable). So perhaps using cell borders and living with their limitations is the only choice, after all. :-( -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "J. Verburg" wrote in message . nl... Hi Bob, Thanks for thinking along. The borders do not print correctly either. I have uploaded the (small) file I used for testing at this location: http://www.knuffelkwijtsijt.nl/dump/feest.doc The bottom two tables are the ones to look at. They show the result of first the uncorrect box, and then the correct box. I looked into the paragraph style of both cells as well, and there a difference shows up.The incorrect box mentions the border as being a box or something, and the correct one mentions each side separately. Yet when I mark each side seperately (using the INcorrect way i described earlier, it still ends up as the box-like style. (I hope I am making sense here, I do not have the right Word-version here at home.) Jeroen "Bob Buckland ?:-)" 75214.226(At Beautiful Downtown)compuserve.com schreef in bericht ... Hi J., Do the borders print correctly? There can be some display issues with this in print preview and in print layout view depending on how much of the text you're boxing in and it's relation to the edge of the cells. In some cases changing the cell margins in Table=Properties will help in others changing to a different printer driver for testing will work. The workaround you listed may not always work unfortunately and may not produce the same results if the same file is opened by another person on another computer. (Word 2003 has the same issue, although not as often). Do you have a URL for a Word created webpage or a .doc file download that shows the problem? ========= "J. Verburg" wrote in message ... Hi, I am having trouble with incomplete borders (using Word 2002 SP3 on WinXpProf SP2). I put some borders around a paragraph that is in a table cell (not around the cell itself!). The rest of the table has no borders. Sometime the border of the paragraph is a complete box with four similar sides, and sometimes the right side border of the box is missing, and the left side border is only half the width. I found some sort of solution, but I would like to know if there is an explanation that can help me do things easier. You can reproduce an example of my problem like this: 1: incomplete border: Insert a table. Select the table and turn off al the borders. Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. The border around the paragraph is incomplete. 2: complete border: Insert a table. (Do NOT change the table borders right now). Then type some text in one of the cells. Select the text (not the entire cell) and then in the borders/shading dialog define a border around it, and apply to the paragraph. NOW select the whole table, and turn off all table borders. The border around the paragraph remains complete. This is a trial and error solution, which has the problem that I have a lot of tables that already have their borders turned off. I want to apply some borders around paragraphs in those tables, but end up with them incomplete, or have to rebuild the tables. I suspect that there is a difference somewhere in the properties of both tables, and maybe I can edit that afterwards, so I can fix the borders in the borderless tables. Any ideas greatly appreciated! Jeroen Verburg -- Let us know if this helped you, Bob Buckland ?:-) MS Office System Products MVP *Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends* For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" - http://microsoft.com/events/series/a...andtricks.mspx |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Wrong Table Width behaviour - Word 2003 | Tables | |||
Table headers/footers and layout | Page Layout | |||
Table AutoFormats vs. Table Styles confusion | Tables | |||
paragraph border suppressed in table cell | Tables | |||
Getting the format of a table | Tables |