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
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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:
This page is about how to format your text using styles. To demonstrate how styles work, we will use the first few paragraphs of the sample document.
Type the first few paragraphs of text (following the rules for typing in Word discussed in the previous Basic Concepts page). Don't worry yet about formatting or fonts or making text bold. Your screen should look something like this (assuming you have clicked the ¶ button to display end-of-paragraph markers):
About foxes and lazy dogs¶
The purpose of this document is to learn how to use Microsoft Word¶
This is a story about a fox that jumped over a lazy dog. The only purpose of the story is to use all 26 letters of the alphabet.¶
The story¶
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.¶
Obviously the text we have on the screen so far isn't what we have in mind for a nicely formatted document. We need to make the Title and the Headings large and bold. And, we need space after the paragraphs.
To achieve that, you need to do two things:
We need to get a bit organized before we can continue. For the moment, would you just trust me and do the following? We can worry later about what we did.
The first paragraph is the Title of the document, and we need to tell Word that it's the Title.
Put the insertion point anywhere within the first paragraph, which is the Title. To do that, click in that paragraph with your mouse, or use the arrow keys.
Figure 1: Locate the Style box on the Formatting toolbar.
On the Formatting toolbar, locate the Style box. It's the box that probably says "Normal", and when you hover over it with the mouse, Word will tell you that this is the Style box (Figure 1). Click the arrow to the right of that box and you'll see a long list drop down. Locate "Title" and click it (or use your arrow keys to locate Title in the list, and then press Enter).
You can now see two things:
Figure 2: When you choose Title from the Style Box, Word applies the Title style. The Style Box then tells you that this paragraph is in Title style.
About foxes and lazy dogs¶
The purpose of this document is to learn how to use Microsoft Word¶
This is a story about a fox that jumped over a lazy dog. The only purpose of the story is to use all 26 letters of the alphabet.¶
The story¶
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.¶
The first paragraph of our document was the Title. The second and third paragraphs are body text. We need to tell Word that these are Body Text. Use the mouse or the arrow keys to move the Insertion Point into the second paragraph (the one that starts "The purpose of this document ..."). From the Style box on the Formatting toolbar, choose Body Text. Then repeat that process for the third paragraph. Your text will now look something like this:
About foxes and lazy dogs¶
The purpose of this document is to learn how to use Microsoft Word¶
This is a story about a fox that jumped over a lazy dog. The only purpose of the story is to use all 26 letters of the alphabet.¶
The story¶
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.¶
Body Text may be defined differently on your machine. But you can probably see that the Body Text style has some space after each paragraph. That's why you don't need to press Enter twice after a paragraph.
The way to make your headings large and bold is to format them using the Heading 1 style.
The fourth paragraph of our text ("The story") is a heading. Position the Insertion Point anywhere within that paragraph. Use the Style box to apply the Heading 1 style. Then apply the Body Text style to the paragraph after the Heading. Your screen should then look something like this:
About foxes and lazy dogs¶
The purpose of this document is to learn how to use Microsoft Word¶
This is a story about a fox that jumped over a lazy dog. The only purpose of the story is to use all 26 letters of the alphabet.¶
The story¶
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.¶
Your machine may be set up so that Heading 1 is formatted differently from what's shown here. It may be a different font, a different size, a different colour, or with more or less spacing before or after the paragraphs. If you don't like the way that Heading 1 is formatted, you can modify the Heading 1 style.
Choose File > Save to save your work.
Let's go back and review what you've done.
A style is a collection of formatting instructions. The formatting instructions are a description of how the style is to look. The style definition includes information about the font, text size, text colour, background colour, paragraph alignment (for example, aligned left, or centred), and the amount of space before or after the paragraph. A style can even be formatted to include a border, an indent or automatic numbering.
If you don't like the way, say, the Body Text style is defined on your machine, you can modify the Title style.
Try this, just as an experiment. We'll modify Body Text to be blue. How you do it depends on your version of Word.
In Word 2002, to change Body Text to blue, do this.
In earlier versions of Word, to change Body Text to blue, do this:
The most important thing to note here is this. When you modified the Body Text style to be blue, all your Body Text paragraphs have gone blue. That's why styles are really powerful. No matter how big your document is (it might be 1,000 pages long), you can change all your Body Text paragraphs to blue with half a dozen clicks of the mouse.
Experiment! You're not going to send this test document to anyone, so it doesn't matter what kind of mess you make. If you don't like blue text, try green by modifying the Body Text style as you did above. If you prefer your Heading 1 style to be larger or smaller, try a different font size by modifying the Heading 1 style. Put more or less space before or after the Title by modifying the Title style.
For more information about modifying styles see How to modify a style in Word.
This page has shown you how to format your text using Styles.
Go to the
next Basic Concept,
or continue to read the Curiosity Shop box.
If you click the Style box, you'll see that Word has 9 Heading styles. They're called Heading 1, Heading 2 etc. Only huge technical documents would use all of them. You might use two or three levels of headings.
Here's an example that uses Heading 1 for main headings ("Chocolate") and Heading 2 for subheadings (for example, "Dark chocolate"). This picture shows the style that has been applied to each paragraph.
The 9 Heading styles are really important styles, because they have "magic" properties. When you come to do larger documents, using Heading styles can save you hours of work in creating a table of contents or index or automatically numbering figures or tables in your document.
Word can automatically number your headings. You might want your document to look something like this:
1. Chocolate
(a) Dark Chocolate
(b) Milk Chocolate
2. Bread
etc.
Don't type numbers (or letters) like this by hand. Get Word to insert them for you. If you want to add numbers to your headings, see How to create numbered headings or outline numbering in your Word Document.
There are many other ways to format your headings in Word. The best way is to apply Word's Heading 1, Heading 2 etc styles. If you need convincing, here are Why use Word's built-in heading styles?.
If you click the View menu in Word, you'll see that there are three (maybe four) different ways to view your document:
These give you different ways to view your document. They all have advantages and disadvantages. You are currently using Print Layout or Page Layout view. This is the view most like what you'll see when you print your document.
Next: Concept 4: Use tables and tabs to arrange text, not spaces