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Basic Concepts - Introduction

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

Tips for Understanding Styles in Word

Quick Reference

Quick Reference: Tips for Understanding Styles in Word

This article was originally written for Microsoft and was published by Microsoft at http://www.microsoft.com/ office/using/column14.asp

Microsoft no longer publishes the article on its site.

Correctly using styles in Microsoft Word is the best way to create consistent, well-formatted documents.

Q. What are styles and what do I use them for?

A. Paragraphs play different roles in our documents. We use different kinds of paragraphs (such as a title, headings, sub‑headings, or picture captions) to help our readers make sense of our documents.

Typically, we want to format each kind of paragraph consistently. For example, we may want all the ordinary body text in a smaller lighter font, but the title in a larger, heavier font. Or we might need a lot of vertical space before all the major headings, but none before picture captions.

In Word, a style is a collection of formatting instructions. You use styles to format the paragraphs in your document. So you would use the "Title" style for your title, "Body Text" style for body text, "Caption" style for the picture captions, and "Heading 1" for the major headings.

Q. What styles can I use?

A. Word comes with dozens of built‑in styles. By default, Word only shows you a few of them. To use all the styles, you need to see a full list.

In Word 2002 or Word 2003, to display a list of all the styles:

  1. On the Format menu, click Styles and Formatting. Word will display the Styles and Formattingtask pane.
  2. In the Show box, select Custom.
  3. In the Format Settings dialog box, under Styles, click Show All and then click OK. Now, in the Show box, choose All Styles.

In earlier versions of Word, to display a list of all the styles:

  1. On the Format menu, click Style. Word will display the Style dialog box.
  2. Under Category, select All Styles.

Q. What do the symbols like ¶ and u in the list of styles mean?

A.  When Word shows you the list of styles, you'll see an icon next to the name of each style. The icons show you what type of style it is. In Word, there are four kinds of styles.

In Word 2002 and Word 2003, in the Styles and Formatting Pane, you may see entries without a symbol. They're not styles! Entries without a symbol have names like "Body Text + Bold" or "Heading 1 + Orange". These are combinations of a style and direct formatting that you have used in your document. Word has not created new styles in your document (see Figure 1).

Image of the Styles and Formatting pane

Figure 1 Word 2002 and Word 2003 list your styles in the Styles and Formatting pane. If an entry in the Style and Formatting pane's list of styles does not have an icon, it's not a style.

Q. How do I use paragraph styles?

A. Paragraph styles are the most commonly-used styles in Word. There are two steps in using paragraph styles.

  1. Locate the Style box on the Formatting toolbar. It probably says 'Normal'.

    Figure 2: To apply a style, locate the Style box on the Formatting toolbar. Click the arrow in the box to choose the style to apply.

    First, tell Word what role your paragraph plays in your document. To do this, click the Style box (it's on the Formatting toolbar, one of the toolbars of icons at the top of the screen), then click the name of a style (see Figure 2). This tells Word whether this paragraph is the title, body text, a heading, a caption, or a paragraph with another function. Read another article from Shauna Kelly about how to apply a style to a paragraph.
  2. Second, tell Word how you want this style formatted. For example, as a default, Word sets Heading 1 as Arial, 16pt, Bold. Let's say you would prefer your major headings to be Verdana, 20pt, Blue. Don't format the text directly. Instead, change the format of the style. This will modify the style. Read an article on Shauna Kelly’s Web site about how to modify the style.

Q. How do I modify a style so I get the formatting I want?

A.

Q. How do I know what style is applied to a paragraph?

A. There are three ways to tell what style you have applied to a paragraph.

Look on the Formatting toolbar

After you choose Title from the drop-down list, the Style box will say 'Title'.

Figure 3: The Style box on the Formatting toolbar shows you what style you have applied to the current paragraph.

The Style box on the Formatting toolbar displays the style name of the current paragraph (see Figure 3).

Use the Word 2002 and Word 2003 Styles and Formatting task pane.

In Word 2002, on the Format menu, click Styles and Formatting. The Styles and Formatting task pane highlights the style name of the current paragraph.

Use the Style Area of Normal View

This view lets you see the paragraph styles of your entire document at once. On the Tools menu, click Options, then click the View Tab. In the Outline and Normal options section, in the Style area width box, enter 2.5cm or 1". Click OK. Now, on the View menu, click Normal.

Q. What is the advantage of modifying a style as opposed to formatting my text directly?

A. Modifying a style saves you time and allows you to format your documents consistently.

Save time when you create your document

Using styles is the quickest way to format a document.

Modifying a style takes about the same number of mouse clicks or keyboard strokes as directly formatting one paragraph.

It then takes just two mouse clicks to apply the style to other paragraphs: click the Style box, then click the name of your style. (It is even quicker if you use a built-in shortcut for the style, have defined your own keyboard shortcut for the style, or put a button on a toolbar for the style.)

Save time when you edit your document

If you modify a style, you instantly change the formatting of all the text in that style—no matter how big your document. If your Heading 1 style is blue, and you modify the Heading 1 style to be green, then all your Heading 1 paragraphs instantly become green.

This gives you powerful control over your document. If your document needs a more open look, modify the Body Text style to give a little more space after each body text paragraph. If you want your main headings to stand out more, modify the Heading 1 style to use a bigger font, with a bit more space before the paragraph.

Using styles makes experimenting easy. If you modify a style and you don't like the effect, on the Edit menu, click Undo.

When you use the built-in heading styles, you also get to use Outline View, which can help you structure your document, and save hours.

Ensure consistency

Using styles ensures consistency. For example, by using styles, you can be certain that all your headings have the same amount of space before them. You don't need to check every heading to be sure.

Save space and time when you create a Web page

If you use Word to create a page for the Web, the HTML code records the style name for each paragraph. If you format each paragraph directly, the HTML code also records each individual part of the direct formatting for each paragraph: the font, size, weight, alignment, indents.

The extra formatting information can easily double the size of your file—so it doubles the time it takes your readers to download and view the document. Go easy on your readers by using styles to format documents for the Web!

Q. Where do styles come from? How does Word decide what styles to put into a new document?

A. When you create a new document, Word bases your new document on a template. Templates are not documents; they are special files that are the basis for new documents. Templates have a .dot extension on their names. If you don't specify a particular template when creating a new document (or if you use "Blank Document"), your new document is based on the normal.dot template.

When a document is born, it inherits the styles that exist in its parent template. From that moment on, the document's styles have no relationship with its parent template. There are only three ways in which the document and its template can change one another's styles.

Q. Body Text on my machine is Arial. My colleague uses Times New Roman. If I send him my document, will the format change?

A. Your styles stay with your document, even if you send the document to someone else who uses different styles.

However, on the Tools menu, in Templates and Add-Ins, make sure you have not turned on the Automatically update document styles box. If this box is turned on, your styles may be overridden.

Q. I've modified my styles just the way I want them. Can I save them to use in all my future documents?

A. Yes you can.

If you're modifying a style, and you want to save that modification to the template on which your document is based, in the Modify Style dialog box, in the Formatting section, click the Add to template box.

If you want to copy all the styles in your document to a template, the easiest way is this.

  1. On the Tools menu, click Templates and Add-Ins. Click Organizer. This dialog box lists all the styles in your document on one side and normal.dot on the other.
  2. If your document is not based on normal.dot, click Close File and then Open File to open your template.
  3. In the list of styles in your documents, press CTRL+click to highlight the styles listed for your document.
  4. Click Copy to copy them to the template.

Now, you'll need to save the template file. To do that, hold down Shift, and click the File menu, then Save All.

Q. I've modified all my styles for this month's report. What's the best way to use these styles in next month's report?

A. You can save this month's report as a template. On the File menu, click Save As. In the Files of Type box, choose Document Template. Give your template a name and click OK.

You can delete all the text, and your styles will still be intact. Or, if you use a standard layout, you could leave the major headings, for example, in the template. For more information, see Creating a Template at the MVP Word FAQ site.

When you come to create next month's report, base the new document on your template. To base a new document on a template:

Q. What's normal style?

A. Word attaches a style to every paragraph in your document. If you don't explicitly tell Word what style to use, it will use Normal style. Learn more about the difference between Normal and Body Text styles.

Q. Can I create my own styles?

A. Of course!

In Word 2002, on the Format menu, click Styles and Formatting. In the Styles and Formatting task pane, click New Style. In earlier versions of Word, on the Format menu, click Style, then click New.

Five tips for using styles

This article was originally written for Microsoft in 2002 and was published by Microsoft at http://www.microsoft.com/office/using/column14.asp

Microsoft no longer publishes the article on its site.

The article has been mildly updated for publishing on this site.