Word 2016 For Dummies. Gookin Dan
use the Show Hide feature, follow these steps:
1. Click the Home tab.
2.
In the Paragraph group, click the Show/Hide command button.The button features a paragraph symbol as its icon, shown in the margin.
To hide the symbols again, click the command button a second time.
✔ Why bother with showing the goobers? Sometimes, it's useful to check out what's up with formatting, find stray tabs visually, or locate missing paragraphs, for example.
✔ WordPerfect users: The Show/Hide command is as close as you can get to your beloved Reveal Codes command.
✔ The keyboard shortcut for the Show/Hide command is Ctrl+Shift+8. Use the 8 on the typewriter area of the keyboard, not the numeric keypad.
When Word underlines your text without permission, it’s drawing your attention to something amiss. These special underlines are not text formats. Here are a few of the underlines you may witness from time to time:
Red zigzag: Spelling errors in Word are underlined with red zigzags. See Chapter 7.
Blue zigzag: Grammatical and word-choice errors are flagged with a blue zigzag underline. Again, see Chapter 7.
Blue underlines: Word courteously highlights web page addresses by using blue underlined text in your document. You can Ctrl+click the blue underlined text to visit the web page.
Red lines: You may see red lines in the margin, underneath text, or through text. If so, it means that you’re using Word’s Track Changes feature. See Chapter 26.
Beyond these automatic underlines, you can apply the underline format to your text, choosing the type of underline and its color. See Chapter 10.
Part II
Your Basic Word
See how to use Word on a tablet or a touchscreen PC at www.dummies.com/extras/word2016.
In this part …
✔ Discover how to use the scroll bars, move the insertion pointer, and get around with keyboard shortcuts.
✔ Find out how to delete characters, lines, sentences, paragraphs, and pages. You'll also be introduced to the lifesaving Undo command.
✔ Learn how to find and replace text in your documents.
✔ Work with blocks of text and see how you can mark, select, copy, move, and paste blocks.
✔ Customize the spell checker and AutoCorrect settings.
✔ Get familiar with how to preview and print your documents, both on paper and electronically.
Chapter 3
To and Fro in a Document
In This Chapter
▶ Using the scroll bars
▶ Moving the insertion pointer
▶ Getting around with keyboard shortcuts
▶ Getting lost and getting back
▶ Using the Go To command
A computer screen is only so big. Your Word document can be much larger, perhaps requiring several monitors all stacked atop each other so that you could view it all at once. That somehow seems impractical. Therefore, Word offers techniques to let you hop, skip, and jump around your document, hither, thither, and yon.
Document Scrolling
It’s ironic that the word scroll is used when referring to an electronic document. The scroll was the first form of portable recorded text, existing long before bound books. On a computer, scrolling is the process by which you view a little bit of a big document in a tiny window.
The document portion of the Word program window features a vertical scroll bar, illustrated in Figure 3-1. The scroll bar’s operation is similar to the scroll bar in any Windows program. As a review, the figure illustrates the mouse’s effect on parts of the scroll bar.
Figure 3-1: The vertical scroll bar.
A key feature in the scroll bar is the elevator button (refer to Figure 3-1). Use the mouse to drag this button up or down to scroll the document. Its position in the scroll bar reflects the location of the text you see. For example, when the elevator button is at the top of the scroll bar, the window shows text at the start of the document.
✔ As you drag the elevator button up or down, you see a page number displayed, as shown in Figure 3-1. When a document is formatted with heading styles, you also see the heading title below the page number, as shown in the figure.
✔ The vertical scroll bar may disappear at times; move the mouse pointer over your text, and it shows up again.
✔ When the elevator button doesn't show up, or is dimmed, the whole document appears in the window. That means there’s nothing to scroll.
✔ Because the elevator button’s size reflects how much of the document appears in the window, the button grows smaller as your document grows longer.
✔
Using the scroll bar to scroll through your document doesn’t move the insertion pointer. If you start typing, don't be surprised when Word jumps back to where the insertion pointer lurks.When your document is wider than can be displayed in the window, a horizontal scroll bar appears. It shows up at the bottom of the document part of the window, just above the status bar. Use the horizontal scroll bar to shift the page back and forth, left and right.
✔ Word automatically slides the document left and right as you type, but that action can be jarring. Instead, try to adjust the horizontal scroll bar to display as much of the text as possible. Or, if you can, make the document window wider.
✔
When the horizontal (left-to-right) shifting bugs you, consider using Word's Zoom tool to adjust the size of your document on the screen. See Chapter 1.If your computer mouse sports a wheel button, you can use that button to scroll through your document. Roll the wheel to scroll up or down; the direction is set in Windows, so I can’t for certain tell you whether rolling the wheel up scrolls your document up or down. Just try it to see how it works.
Some mice let you press the wheel button or tilt it from side to side. If so, press and hold down the wheel button and drag the mouse forward or back to slowly pan your document up or down. Tilt the wheel button from side to side to pan the document left and right.
Unlike using the scroll bars, when you use the mouse wheel to scroll the document, the insertion pointer stays on the page you’re viewing. Use the Shift+F5 keyboard shortcut to return the insertion pointer to its previous