
Word 2016 For Professionals For Dummies
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Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- About This Book
- How to Use This Book
- Foolish Assumptions
- Icons Used in This Book
- Beyond the Book
- Where to Go from Here
- Part 1 Fancy Formatting and Froufrou
- Chapter 1 Font Fun
- A Knowledge of Fonts
- Describing text
- Understanding text attributes
- Selecting the proper typeface
- Font Control
- Exploring the Font group
- Using the Font dialog box
- Choosing fonts with a theme
- Changing the default font
- Typography Control
- Changing text scale
- Setting character spacing
- Adding kerning and ligatures
- Adjusting text position
- Text Effects Strange and Wonderful
- Accessing the Format Text Effects pane
- Changing text fill
- Setting a text outline
- Adding a text shadow
- Configuring text reflection and glow
- Creating hidden text
- Find and Replace Text Formatting
- Chapter 2 Paragraph Layout
- A Typical Paragraph
- Understanding paragraph formatting
- Finding paragraph control in Word
- Working with the Ruler
- Pure Paragraph Formatting
- Using justification
- Working with paragraph indents
- Setting a first-line indent
- Creating a hanging indent
- Increasing space before or after a paragraph
- Adjusting line spacing
- Adding some shade
- Hyphenation
- Adding a manual hyphen
- Automatically hyphenating text
- Inserting an unbreakable hyphen
- Of Widows and Orphans
- Chapter 3 Tabs and Lists
- The Whole Tab Thing
- Understanding tab stops
- Setting tab stops on the Ruler
- Using the Tabs dialog box
- Viewing tab characters
- Tab Cookbook
- Building a hanging-indent list
- Building a double-tab hanging-indent list
- Creating a tabbed list
- Setting a Center tab stop
- Building a left-justified, right-justified list
- Building a back-to-back list
- Lining up values with a decimal tab
- Creating a leader tab list
- Adding a leader tab to an existing tab stop
- Building fill-in-the-blanks underlines
- Finding an excuse to use the Bar tab
- Numbered Lists
- Numbering paragraphs
- Adjusting numbering indents
- Skipping paragraph numbers
- Restarting numbered paragraphs
- Numbering paragraphs starting at a specific value
- Creating custom paragraph numbers
- Bulleted Lists
- The Multilevel List
- Chapter 4 Custom Tables
- Let's Build a Table
- Creating a table the original way
- Inserting a fresh, new table
- Converting tabs to a table
- Drawing a table
- Adding a quick table
- Table Editing
- Filling the table
- Selecting stuff in a table
- Inserting rows or columns
- Merging and splitting cells
- Setting the table size
- Adjusting row and column size
- Make the Table Less Obnoxious
- Adding a table heading
- Aligning text
- Setting text direction
- Setting gridlines
- Applying instant table formats
- Some Table Tricks
- Sorting a table
- Splitting a table between two pages
- Applying table math
- Adios, Table
- Removing a cell
- Deleting rows or columns
- Converting a table to text
- Deleting a table's text
- Deleting a table
- Chapter 5 Custom Columns
- The Columns Philosophy
- Understanding columns
- Setting columns in Word
- More than One Column
- Creating 2-column text
- Applying full justification
- Adjusting the column gutter
- Using a column break
- Applying columns to part of a document
- Triple Columns - and More!
- Building a triple-column page
- Setting four or more columns
- Chapter 6 Page Control
- All about Page Formatting
- Finding the page formatting commands
- Choosing the paper size
- Creating envelopes
- Adding more than one page per sheet
- Changing orientation
- Setting the page margins
- Behold! A New Page!
- Adding a hard page break
- Inserting a blank page
- The Big Deal with Sections
- Understanding sections
- Creating a section break
- Removing a section break
- Chapter 7 Headers and Footers
- Headers, Headings, Footers, Footings
- Quick-Slap a Header or Footer
- Your Very Own Headers and Footers
- Creating a header
- Switching between the header and footer
- Typing text in a header
- Adding page numbers
- Placing objects in the header
- Resetting the header position
- Removing a header
- When Headers and Footers Change
- Working with headers in sections
- Creating odd and even headers
- Page Numbering Galore
- Adding an instant page number
- Restarting page numbering
- Choosing another page number style
- Chapter 8 Style Methods and Madness
- The World of Styles
- Understanding style types
- Finding Word's style commands
- Applying a style
- Unapplying a style
- A New Style
- Formatting text and then creating a style
- Making a style from scratch
- Modifying a style
- Setting the next style
- Creating a heading style
- Style Management
- Selecting instances of a style
- Deleting a style
- Stealing a style from another document
- Chapter 9 The Tao of Templates
- Template 101
- Understanding templates
- Starting a new document
- Choosing an online template
- Using one of your own templates
- Make Your Own Template
- Building a custom template
- Modifying a template
- Updating template documents
- Template Management
- Finding the templates
- Reassigning templates
- Part 2 Go Graphical
- Chapter 10 Text and Graphics Layout
- Where Text and Objects Meet
- Finding things to insert into a document
- Mixing text and objects
- Layout Choices
- Setting layout options
- Using the Inline option
- Wrapping text around an object
- Editing the wrap points
- Setting the image's position
- Floating an object in front of or behind text
- Aligning objects on a page
- Chapter 11 Drawing Objects
- Shapes and Such
- Inserting a drawing object
- Drawing a freeform shape
- Changing the object's position
- Resizing the shape
- Rotating the shape
- Setting the objects' colors, line styles, and effects
- Editing a shape
- Shapes in Groups
- Arranging shapes in front or behind
- Aligning shapes
- Grouping multiple shapes
- Using the drawing canvas
- Text and Graphics in Boxes
- Inserting a text box
- Converting a shape into a text box
- Linking text boxes
- Adding a picture to a shape
- Chapter 12 Pictures and Illustrations
- One Thousand Words
- Adding an image
- Copying and pasting an image
- Adding an image from the web
- Replacing an image
- Removing a picture
- Image Adjustment
- Cropping an image
- Removing the background
- Making corrections
- Adjusting the image's color
- Adding artistic effects
- Restoring an image (removing effects)
- Picture Frame Formatting
- Selecting a picture style
- Adding a border
- Applying a frame effect
- Caption That Picture
- Chapter 13 Insert Objects Weird and Amazing
- Objects Beyond Mere Mortal Text
- Having fun with WordArt
- Adding SmartArt
- Inserting a whole 'nuther Word document
- Summing up equations
- Putting a video in your document
- Where Word Meets Excel
- Pasting part of an Excel worksheet into a document
- Copying and linking a worksheet
- Opening an Excel worksheet inside of Word
- Whipping up a chart
- Part 3 Word at Work
- Chapter 14 Beyond Routine Documents
- Cover Pages
- Selecting a preset cover page
- Designing your own cover page
- Resetting the page number
- Centering a page from top to bottom
- Using text boxes for titles
- Word's Phony Watermarks
- Adding a watermark
- Customizing the watermark
- Removing the watermark
- Printing background objects
- Document Tricks
- Writing a return address
- Adding page color
- Setting a page border
- Putting the filename in a header or footer
- Printing for three-ring binding
- Setting document properties
- Creating a digital signature object
- Chapter 15 Different Document Types and Printer Control
- Save Documents in Strange Formats
- Understanding document formats
- Saving a plain-text document
- Saving in the old Word document format
- Creating a PDF
- Saving an RTF document
- Open Documents from Strange Formats
- Recovering text from any old file
- Choosing a specific document format
- Reading a PDF
- Converting a document from Compatibility Mode
- Printer Tricks
- Printing a PDF
- Printing multiple copies
- Printing on both sides of a sheet of paper
- Printing more than one page per sheet
- Chapter 16 Collaboration and Sharing
- Here Are My Thoughts
- Highlighting text
- Inserting a comment
- Showing and hiding comments
- Reviewing comments
- Marking a comment as Done
- Deleting comments
- Look What They Did!
- Activating the Track Changes feature
- Disabling Track Changes
- Locking the changes
- Showing or hiding revisions
- Accepting or rejecting changes
- When Revision Marks Are Forgotten
- Online Collaboration
- Sending out invitations
- Working together on a document
- Ending collaboration
- Chapter 17 Word for Lawyers and WordPerfect Converts
- Line Numbers on the Page
- Adding line numbers
- Formatting line numbers
- Removing line numbers
- The Table of Authorities
- Marking citations
- Inserting the table of authorities
- Other Legal Considerations
- Setting a left-right block indent
- Redacting text
- Hello, WordPerfect User!
- Converting your WordPerfect documents
- Revealing the codes
- Understanding Word's oddities
- Part 4 Word for Writers
- Chapter 18 Tools for Every Author
- Behold! The Document Window
- Showing or hiding the Ribbon
- Going full-screen
- Setting the document view
- Adding useful panes
- Controlling the status bar
- Count Your Words
- Checking the word count
- Adding the word count to the status bar
- Inserting the current word count into your document
- Viewing readability statistics
- Document Proofing
- Disabling on-the-fly proofing
- Proofing your document manually
- Understanding the spell check icon
- Working with the dictionary
- Undoing an ignore proofing command
- Adjusting the grammar checking sensitivity
- Tools for a Wordsmith
- Choosing a better word
- Translating some text
- Ignoring a span of foreign text
- Chapter 19 From Brainstorm to Outline
- The Outline Thing
- Word's Outline View
- Activating Outline view
- Exploring the Outlining tab
- Using heading styles
- Outline Construction
- Creating top-level topics
- Moving topics
- Demoting or promoting a topic
- Moving topics and subtopics together
- Adding narrative
- Outline Presentation
- Collapsing and expanding outline topics
- Printing the outline
- Using the navigation pane
- Chapter 20 Humongous Documents
- Write That Novel!
- Building one, long manuscript
- Writing one chapter per document
- One Long Manuscript
- Bookmarking your text
- Visiting a bookmark
- Removing a bookmark
- Splitting the window
- Opening a second window
- The Master Document
- Creating the master document
- Working with the master document
- Chapter 21 Document References
- Table of Contents
- Understanding the TOC
- Inserting a TOC
- Updating the TOC
- Footnotes and Endnotes
- Adding a footnote
- Creating an endnote
- Reviewing notes
- Changing notes
- Setting note options
- Converting between footnotes and endnotes
- Citations and the Bibliography
- Creating citations
- Inserting existing citations
- Building the bibliography
- Automatic Captions
- Adding a caption
- Inserting a list of captions
- Cross-References
- Glossary
- Index
- Marking entries for the index
- Inserting the index
- Updating the index
- Chapter 22 eBook Publishing
- The eBook Process
- Writing the manuscript
- Formatting your eBook document
- Using pictures or graphics
- Creating hyperlinks
- Adding document references
- eBook Publishing Tips
- Titling your tome
- Generating a cover
- Finding a publisher
- Publishing with Kindle Direct Publishing
- Previewing the final eBook
- Setting the price
- Marketing your eBooks
- Part 5 Document Automation
- Chapter 23 AutoCorrect, AutoText, and AutoFormat
- Know Your Autos
- AutoCorrect the Boo-Boos
- Working with AutoCorrect capitalization settings
- Pretending that AutoCorrect is AutoText
- Undoing an AutoCorrect change
- Instant Typing with AutoText Building Blocks
- Creating an AutoText building block
- Reviewing building blocks
- AutoFormat As You Type
- Understanding AutoFormat options
- Undoing an AutoFormat change
- Chapter 24 Document Fields
- Field Philosophy
- Inserting a field
- Working with fields behind the scenes
- Updating a field
- Finding fields in a document
- Building a field manually
- Field Cookbook
- Inserting page number fields
- Using date-and-time fields
- Adding document info fields
- Echoing text in a field
- Chapter 25 The Big Macro Picture
- Behold the Developer Tab
- Word Macro 101
- Understanding macros
- Recording a macro
- Running a macro
- Deleting a macro
- Quick Macro Access
- Assigning a macro to a Quick Access toolbar button
- Creating a macro keyboard shortcut
- The Joys of Macro-Enabled Documents
- Saving macros with the current document
- Creating a macro-enabled template
- Macro Security
- Visiting the Trust Center
- Dealing with a macro-enabled document
- Chapter 26 More Macro Fun
- The VBA Editor
- Exploring the editor
- Reviewing macro code
- Editing a macro's VBA code
- Dealing with a macro boo-boo
- Beyond Mortal Macros
- Processing an entire document
- Entering a command that you cannot type
- Exploring VBA references
- Chapter 27 Dynamic Templates with Content Controls
- The World of Content Controls
- Inserting a content control
- Changing the content control view
- Setting a content control's properties
- Removing a content control
- Converting a content control to text
- Useful Content Controls
- Setting up a fill-in-the-blanks item
- Adding a multiline text field
- Inserting an image
- Selecting the date
- Building a drop-down list
- Chapter 28 Final Document Preparation and Protection
- Document Inspection
- Finding things you forget
- Using the Accessibility Checker
- Checking document compatibility
- Document Encryption and Password Protection
- Encrypting your document
- Removing encryption
- Restrict and Control Document Changes
- Setting text-editing restrictions
- Marking a document as "final"
- Document Recovery
- Activating automatic backup
- Viewing an older version of your document
- Searching for lost documents
- Part 6 Beyond Word Processing
- Chapter 29 Word and the Internet
- The Backstage
- Using the Backstage
- Removing a file from the Open Backstage
- Adding a storage place to the Backstage
- Summoning the traditional dialog boxes
- Disabling the Backstage
- Cloud Storage Options
- Understanding OneDrive
- Adding OneDrive to other devices
- Fixing OneDrive sync issues
- Exploring other cloud storage solutions
- Word and Office 365
- Obtaining Office 365
- Checking your Office 365 subscription
- Word on the Web
- Chapter 30 Web Page Publishing
- Ode to Web Publishing
- Obtaining a web host
- Understanding web page production
- Examining a web page document
- Web Page Creation in Word
- Setting Web Layout view
- Formatting a document for the web
- Inserting a hyperlink
- Saving a web page document
- Chapter 31 Customize Word
- General Options and Settings
- Showing special characters
- Controlling text selection
- Setting text-pasting options
- Disabling annoying features
- Specifying the default document folder
- Word's Appearance
- Showing the ruler
- Revealing the scrollbars
- Removing the Style Area view
- Moving the Quick Access toolbar
- Fun with the Quick Access Toolbar
- Configuring the toolbar
- Adding special commands to the toolbar
- Rearranging commands on the toolbar
- Separating command groups on the toolbar
- Removing commands
- Resetting the toolbar
- Build a Custom Tab on the Ribbon
- Creating a new tab
- Adding commands to a new tab
- Changing command and group names
- Building more groups
- Stealing another group from the Ribbon
- Keyboard Customization
- Assigning a keyboard shortcut to a command
- Setting a symbol's shortcut key
- Unassigning a keyboard shortcut
- Chapter 32 Breaking Your Word
- Quick Problems and Solutions
- "What did I just do!"
- "I just saved my document, and now I can't find it!"
- "This line just won't go away!"
- "How can I get this extra page not to print!"
- The Document Needs a-Fixin'
- Opening a document in the proper format
- Opening a document for repair
- Reassigning the document's template
- Extracting a fouled document's text
- Word Repair and Recovery
- Running the Office Repair utility
- Fixing the Normal template
- Entering Startup mode
- Running Word in Safe Mode
- Part 7 The Part of Tens
- Chapter 33 Ten Fun Macros
- Message Pop-Ups
- Document Cleanup
- Double-Indent Paragraph
- Word Swap
- And/Or Word Swap
- Swap Sentences
- Swap Header and Footer Text
- Update Document Fields
- Place Parenthetical Text into a Footnote
- Spike Text
- Chapter 34 Ten Function Key Shortcuts
- F1
- F2
- F3
- F4
- F5
- F6
- F7
- F8
- F9
- F10
- F11
- F12
- Index
- EULA
Introduction
Welcome to Word 2016 For Professionals For Dummies, a book that uncovers the truth about parapsychology and the people in Asia who hand-place sesame seeds on the hamburger buns used by Burger King. I'm not serious, of course. I'm just checking to see whether you're actually reading this introduction.
This book goes way beyond the beginner's user level when it comes to word processing with Microsoft Word. This isn't a technical book, but rather a book geared toward the professional or anyone else who is serious about the words they write. Word is a powerful program, and few people venture into its more sophisticated levels. That's sad because many of Word's features can save you time and help you create a better document
About This Book
Are you still reading the introduction? That's really weird. Most people don't even bother. In fact, they simply take the copy of this book that they illegally downloaded, get the information they want, and then go on Facebook and lament how the economy is crumbling. I love that story.
Still, I'm proud of you for continuing to read the introduction. Truly, it's the best part of the book. That's because this is where I explain how this book covers a lot of material not found anywhere else. Google? Forget it. I've looked. Those people who put "help" up on Google don't know what they're talking about. If you really want to understand Word, and create outstanding documents, you have the best resource in your hands right now.
This book is a reference. It's designed to cover a topic quickly and let you get back to work. Each chapter covers a topic, and major sections within the chapter go into detail. Within each section are specific activities, complete with steps or further instructions that help you accomplish a task. Sample sections in this book include
- Creating custom paragraph numbers
- Splitting a table between two pages
- Wrapping text around an object
- Opening an Excel worksheet inside of Word
- Converting your WordPerfect documents
- Creating the master document
- Marketing your eBooks
- Creating an AutoText building block
- Recording a macro
The topics covered are vast, but you don't have anything to memorize. Information is cross-referenced. Technical tidbits are carefully shoved to the end of a section or enclosed in a box. Though it would be great to master all that Word offers, my sense is that you prefer to find out only what you need to know and then get back to your work.
How to Use This Book
This is an active book. When you explore a topic, you see steps you follow to accomplish a given task or create an example. These steps involve using Word and the computer - specifically, the keyboard and mouse. If you have a touchscreen, that works as well, but it's far more effective to use a mouse or another pointing device.
The mouse can point, click, double-click, and right-click. These are the basic mouse activities used through the text. The click always means a left-click. Point means to position the mouse at a certain location on the screen but not to click.
The mouse pointer is referred to as "the mouse pointer," and its common icon is shown in the margin. This pointer is often called the cursor.
In a document's text, the mouse pointer changes to the I-beam pointer, shown in the margin. When you click the mouse in the text, you move the insertion pointer, which shows where new characters appear as you type. I may also refer to the insertion pointer as the toothpick cursor.
Keyboard shortcuts are shown like this:
Ctrl+D
Press and hold the Ctrl (Control) key and then tap the D key.
Multiple key combinations are also presented:
Ctrl+Shift+S
Here you press Ctrl and Shift together and then tap the S key. Release all the keys.
Word presents its commands on a Ribbon. The commands are organized into tabs and then groups. Each command is a button, and the button's artwork appears in this book's margins.
Some buttons feature menus. To view the menu, you either click the button itself or click a down-pointing triangle next to the button. The text directs you whether to click the button or its menu.
When a menu features a submenu, this text uses the following format to show how the submenu or command is chosen:
Page Number???Current Position???Plain Number
This direction tells you to click the Page Number button and, from its menu, choose the Current Position submenu and then the Plain Number item.
Other, more specific directions for some of the unusual things Word does are explained throughout the text.
Foolish Assumptions
This book assumes that you have a basic knowledge of Word. You know how the program works, and you've created crude and ugly documents. Perhaps you didn't believe them to be crude and ugly, but they are. And that's why you purchased this book, because you want to create more professional, respectable documents.
You are using Word 2016, which is the current version of Word as this book goes to press. Some of this book may apply to Word 2013 and possibly Word 2010, but the material isn't specific to those releases. You can have the stand-alone version of Word 2016, or you can use the Office 365 subscription version. Any differences between versions are noted in the text.
This book does not cover Word for the Macintosh. If you see an Apple logo on your computer, I can't promise that anything in this text applies to your software.
Parts of this book reference other Office applications - specifically, Excel and Outlook. Even so, you don't need to have these programs installed to get the most from the book.
If you need more basic information on Word, I can recommend Microsoft Word 2016 For Dummies (Wiley). That book covers material deemed too basic or common for this book, though it's still good material. For example, that book covers mail merge, which this book shuns like that steaming pan of gray goo at the back of an all-you-can-eat five-dollar buffet.
Icons Used in This Book
Festooning this book's pages are icons and micons. The icons consist of the traditional four For Dummies margin icons. They are:
This icon flags a useful suggestion or kindhearted tip. I'd like to think of all text in this book as a tip, but my editor dislikes it when I overuse the Tip icon. So only the very bestest tips are flagged.
This icon appears by text that gives you a friendly reminder to do something, to not forget something, or to do something else, which I don't recall at the moment.
This icon highlights things you're not supposed to do, like try to put sheet metal into a computer printer. That sounds cool, but if you really want a document to shine, I have better advice.
This icon alerts you to information you can happily avoid reading. I use it to flag parts of the text where I get technical, go off on a tangent, or mention material that's not really necessary to the topic, but my inner nerd just can't control himself. Feel free to avoid anything flagged with the Technical Stuff icon.
Along with the icons, you'll find margin art. These marginal masterpieces represent various items you see on the screen while using Word. They might be command buttons, doodads, controls, gizmos, or flecks of paint that look interesting. These micons (margin icons) help you navigate through steps in the text.
Beyond the Book
The publisher maintains a support page with updates or changes that occur since this book has gone to press. You'll also find bonus content in the form of an online cheat sheet, which isn't really cheating and definitely isn't a sheet.
To peruse the online content, visit www.dummies.com, but that's not the right page. You'll need to search for Word 2016 For Professionals For Dummies, and open the Download tab on this book's dedicated page. I'd offer more specific information, but I don't have any further details. Even I don't know where the online material is really hidden. When I asked, the publisher muttered something about "elves" and she then proceeded to consume dry coffee grounds.
Where to Go from Here
The first thing you need to do is stop reading the introduction. I'm serious: It's over. The book's vast pages await a bright reading light and your eager gaze.
Check out the table of contents and see what interests you. Peruse the index and look up a special topic. Or just flip to a page and become enlightened. Word does so much and offers so many tools to help you make better documents that you can truly start anywhere.
My email address is dgookin@wambooli.com. Yes, that's my real address. I reply to all email I receive, and you'll get a quick reply if you keep your question short and specific to this book or to Word itself. Although I enjoy saying Hi, I cannot answer technical support questions or help you troubleshoot your computer. Thanks for understanding.
You...
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