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Basic Concepts - Introduction

  1. Start typing
  2. Rules for typing in Word
  3. Use styles to format text
  4. Use tables and tabs to arrange text
  5. Use a bulleted paragraph style for bullets
  6. Make changes, fix mistakes, edit your document as many times as you like
  7. Use page numbering and let the text flow from page to page
  8. Print your document

Understanding styles

Tips for understanding styles in Microsoft Word

How to apply a style

How to apply a style using the keyboard in Microsoft Word 2007

How to modify a style

How to reinstate the Styles combo box in Word 2007

How styles in Word cascade

Why does Word sometimes override bold and italics when I apply a paragraph style, but sometimes it does not?

Why I don't use Custom Table Styles

Keep a figure on the same page as its caption

Is your image slipping? How to get your images to stand still

Create a glossary

How the Styles and Formatting Pane works

Why does text change format when I copy it into another document?

How Paste Options works

Letters are missing in my watermark when I print

How to tell Word to use Australian English or other non-US form of English

Control bullets

Create numbered headings

Number headings and figures in Appendixes

Why use Word's built-in heading styles?

Create a table of contents

How Document Map works

Relationship between documents and templates

Attaching a template to a document

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

What happens when I send my document to someone else?

How does Track Changes work?

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

CompleteWordCount

How to get Word to automatically fill the Edit > Find and Edit > Replace boxes with the selected text

Office 2007 information

Trivia

Contents of this site

Getting help, asking questions

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Word: Basic Concept 7

Use page numbering and let the text flow from page to page

What this page is about

For those of you who have just joined us, this is a page in the series of Basic Concepts in Word. Use the menu at left to go to the different pages.

Each Basic Concept page has three sections:

Tutorial

Flowing text from page to page

Word will flow text from page to page. It works out when text will no longer fit on a page, and put the text on the next page. Word isn't a typewriter, so you don't need to tell it where the end of each page is to occur. Word works out where a page break will occur based on the way you set up and format your document.

In general, let Word flow the text from page to page. Word controls the text flow using the following information.

What printer do you have?

Word knows how your printer works. For example, it knows how close to the edge of the paper your printer can print. To change the printer that Word is working with, choose File > Print and choose a printer in the Name box.

What size paper are you using?

Choose File > Page Setup and click the Paper tab. Choose your Paper Size. In the Paper Size box, Word will list the paper sizes that your printer can deal with.

What margins have you set up?

Choose File > Page Setup and choose the Margins tab. Set your page margins here, and Word will place your text within the margins.

How are your styles formatted?

The formatting of your styles affects how the text flows from page to page.

When you modify a paragraph style, you can modify the settings on the Line and Page Breaks tab. To reach the Line and Page Breaks tab:

  • in Word 2002: Format > Styles and Formatting. Right-click on the name of your style and choose Modify. Click Format, then Paragraph
  • in earlier versions of Word: Format > Styles > Modify > Format > Paragraph.

On the Line and Page Breaks tab, you'll find four important settings. From those with the biggest to the smallest effect, these are:

Tip

Tip for tables

"Keep with next" works on paragraphs in tables. If a table is not breaking across a page where you think it should, make sure that all the paragraphs aren't set to "Keep with Next".

  • Page Break Before
  • Tells Word to put a page break before paragraphs in this style. That is, paragraphs in this style will always appear at the top of a page. Useful for heading styles. Avoid using Insert > Break > Page Break.
  • Keep with next
  • Tells Word to keep paragraphs in this style on the same page as the next paragraph. That is, there will never be a page break immediately after paragraphs in this style. Useful for headings, but also useful for making captions stick together with the pictures they're captioning, and for rows in a table.
  • Keep lines together
  • Tells Word to keep all the lines of paragraphs in this style together on one page. That is, there will never be a page break within this paragraph. Useful for text that consists of many short paragraphs, although it results in an uneven bottom edge to the pages.
  • [concepts/_private/word_includes/BugPicture.htm]Keep lines together doesn't work on paragraphs in tables. To my mind, that's a bug.
  • Widow/Orphan Control
  • Prevents Word from having the first line of a paragraph alone at the bottom of a page, or the last line of a paragraph stranded at the top of a page. Useful for just about all kinds of text.

How is each individual paragraph formatted?

You can apply direct formatting to a paragraph, over the top of the formatting of its style. Put the cursor in a paragraph and choose Format > Paragraph and click the Line and Page Breaks tab. You'll find the same controls listed above for use with styles. When these controls are used to define a style, they control all paragraphs formatted in that style. When these controls are used to format an individual paragraph, they affect only that individual paragraph.

Controls you can use for individual paragraphs using Format > Paragraph and choosing the Line and Page Breaks tab:

  • Page Break Before. Avoid using Insert > Break > Page Break.
  • Keep with next
  • Keep lines together
  • Widow/Orphan Control

Page numbering

If you want to insert page numbers in your document, you might reasonably assume that Insert > Page Numbers would be the way to go. That will work, but it doesn't give you much flexibility or control. Newbies use Insert > Page Numbers. It's not for grown ups.

To insert a page number on the bottom of every page, do this:

  • View > Header and Footer.
  • On the Header and Footer toolbar, click the Switch Between Header and Footer button.
  • If you want the page number in the centre of the page, press Tab once. If you want the page number on the right-hand side of the page, press Tab twice.
  • On the Header and Footer toolbar, click the Insert Page Number button (it's the button with one #).
  • If you don't want the page number on the first page of your document, continue with these steps:
    • On the Header and Footer toolbar, click the Page Setup button (the button that looks like a book).
    • You'll be taken to the Page Setup dialog, on the Layout tab. Click Different First Page, then OK.
  • Click Close.

Reference

Flowing text from page to page, and forcing page breaks

  • Word will work out when your text will no longer fit in the page. It will then flow the text to the top of the next page.
  • To control how the text flows from page to page, use the following:
    • File > Page Setup to set printer, paper size and margins
    • modify a paragraph style to set Page Break Before, Keep Lines Together, Keep With Next and Widow/Orphan control
    • apply direct formatting to individual paragraphs to set Page Break Before, Keep Lines Together, Keep With Next and Widow/Orphan control

Page numbering

To insert a page number on the bottom of every page, choose View > Header and Footer, and use the buttons on the Header and Footer toolbar to create the page numbering. Avoid using Insert > Page Numbers.

Curiosity Shop: More about page numbering

For more, much more, about page numbering, see How to control the page numbering in a Word document from the MS Word MVP FAQ site.

Next: Concept 8: Print your document

For Microsoft Office developers and power users.
15-16 November 2008.