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In word table when I type in a cell, if the content is large, the whole row moves to the next page. How could I prevent it? i.e. only that line should go to the next page which doesnot fit in the page, not the whole row.

2007-01-25 17:10:57 · 5 answers · asked by vishnuenterprise 1 in Computers & Internet Software

5 answers

Dear
Simply select the whole table go to table properties from table menu
in the resulting dialogue box select ROW tab and check the Allow row to break across pages option and press OK
now see the result
by
www.dataconmng.com

2007-01-25 17:28:34 · answer #1 · answered by RAM 3 · 0 0

well try to go to page set up and change the size of the margins

or change the font size

or adjust the table size with the drag tool

2007-01-25 17:18:04 · answer #2 · answered by Dhoom Crazy 1 · 0 0

well i think you can find answers to all your queries related to word here
hope this helps you

http://addbalance.com/usersguide/
This is based on the Microsoft's Microsoft® Word® Users' Guide to Microsoft® Word® For over a year, Microsoft worked closely with some of the leading experts in the legal community to create the Microsoft Word Legal User's Guide. The Guide contained step-by-step instructions to help legal users accomplish the tasks necessary to build robust legal documents in Microsoft Word 97 or Microsoft Word 2000.

This Intermediate Users' Guide is based closely on the Legal Users' Guide and supplements it. It contains all the text from the original Legal Users' Guide together with additional guides and links to other resources. Each chapter also contains a link to the corresponding original Legal Users' Guide.

The guide is not intended as a sales guide, telling you about all of the useful features in Word. Rather, the guide is focused on showing professionals step by step instructions for building great documents.

You do not need to read the guide in any particular order. It is broken up into chapters so that you can focus on what you need at a particular time. However, Microsoft recommended that users work their way through the entire guide as it contains much useful information. Especially useful is the guide to third-party solutions that legal users can purchase and download to enhance the power of Word in a legal setting.

bulletIntroduction
bulletBasic Formatting
bulletLegal Numbering [tricky and important]
bulletUnderstanding Styles [the heart of Word]
bulletSections, Section Breaks, and Headers-Footers
bulletComplex Legal Documents [Tables of Authorities, Tables of Contents, footnotes, endnotes, bookmarks & cross-references]
bulletTables in the Legal Environment
bulletTrack Changes (Document comparison, document merge, mark-up of editing)
bulletTemplate Basics (new draft chapter!)
bulletConfidentiality and MetaData (new: not really a chapter but some important observations)
bulletTroubleshooting
bulletDocument Corruption
bulletThird-Party Vendors Directory
bulletRevisions / Modifications - notes on modifications made by Charles Kenyon

Notes from revisor/supplementor (CK): One of my first professors in law school said that every subject should be taught last. By that he meant that each course in law school meant more in context of other legal knowledge. It is all interrelated and an understanding of one (seemingly unrelated) part allows a deeper understanding of every other part. A similar statement can be made of attempting to learn the maze that makes up that complex engine for document creation known as Microsoft Word. You will probably gain by re-reading the chapters in this guide after you have read and digested the other chapters.

As revised, this set of tutorials applies to Word 97-2003. Most of it will help you with Word 2007 as well, except for the change in interface. The new interface is not yet addressed in this guide. Most of the commands and methods discussed, continue to work in Word 2007, but you'll have to find the commands.

2007-01-25 18:16:33 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

very confusing matter. do a search with google and yahoo. that could help!

2014-12-10 15:40:27 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

its very difficult.....

2007-01-25 19:14:59 · answer #5 · answered by shuvadip d 3 · 0 0

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