Basic concepts
Styles
Tips for understanding styles in Microsoft Word
Why I don't use Custom Table Styles
Layout
Keep a figure on the same page as its caption
Is your image slipping? How to get your images to stand still
Formatting
How the Styles and Formatting Pane works
Why does text change format when I copy it into another document?
Letters are missing in my watermark when I print
How to tell Word to use Australian English or other non-US form of English
Numbering, bullets, headings, outlines
Number headings and figures in Appendixes
Why use Word's built-in heading styles?
Templates
Relationship between documents and templates
Attaching a template to a document
Word and Excel
How to copy a chart from Excel into a Word document
Insert an Excel chart or worksheet into a landscape page
How to create a hyperlink from a Word document to an Excel workbook
Sharing documents
What happens when I send my document to someone else?
How to use the Reviewing Toolbar in Microsoft Word 2002 and Word 2003
Control how a Word document opens from the internet or an intranet
Tools
Resources
Getting help, asking questions
Home
This page, and those that follow from it, present some Basic Concepts of using Microsoft Word. These pages are designed for someone who is a new user of Word, although there might be something here even for those who have used Word for a while.
The Basic Concepts pages assume that you know how to start Word, how to click a menu item and choose an item on the menu. You also need to know the basics about how files are stored in folders (once known as directories), so that when you save your work, you'll be able to find it again tomorrow.
Assuming you know those things, these pages present basics of using Microsoft Word for newbies. We start from scratch.
A lot of people who come new to Word have used a typewriter in the past. Here's a sample document, and how you would produce it on a typewriter.
Word produces pieces of paper with text on them. So do typewriters. That's about where the similarity ends.
Word is not a typewriter. So you can't use it in exactly the same way as you would have used a typewriter.
Word is also not WordPerfect, or Ami Pro, or any other word processing program. So if you're moving from WordPerfect or another word processor, you can't use Word in exactly the same way as you are used to using your old word processor.
Here is the same sample document, showing how you produce it in Word.
So, there are 8 basic concepts that we need to learn.
There is one web page for each Basic Concept. Use the menu at the top left to go to the relevant page, or use the link below to go to the first Basic Concept.
Each Basic Concept page is in three sections:
Next: Concept 1: Start typing your document
Microsoft designed Word to be friendly for the user. The outcome of that philosophy is that Word often has more than one way to achieve much the same thing.
If you're talking to friends or colleagues about using Word, they may do things differently.
There are sometimes no "right" or "wrong" ways to use Word. But some ways are easier or more effective than others.
Next: Concept 1: Start typing your document
This page is dedicated to my mother for two reasons. First, she was the one who made me learn to type when I was 12. Second, she had done a pretty good job of learning how to use Excel, so she used Excel to write a business letter. I decided that she needed somewhere to learn the basics of Word!