Tag Archives: Word 365

Working with Tables: Making them Pretty

Place the cursor within a table in Word and a Table Design ribbon will appear (shown below). In the middle of that ribbon, you can choose from dozens of looks for the table. Most publishing workflows ask for simple tables with minimal “design” to them. Most style guides prefer the least possible formatting, barely even borders or “rules”. So we’ll focus on working within those parameters.

Access this panel of design options for your table by clicking the arrow at the bottom right of this group on the ribbon (in Windows) or hovering over the middle of the group and clicking the arrow tab that pops up (Mac).

If, instead, Word is the design tool (common for internal office reports and proposals, for example), start by selecting one of the options on that ribbon that fits the design specs; most likely, pick an option that from the design “theme” of the product. After that, the rest of this post applies to you, too.

Use Styles for Contents

The problem with changing the font and alignment of table contents is that if the cell contents are still set to Normal style, you’ll lose all that manual finessing the second any change is made to Normal (such as changing the alignment or first line indent) or if Normal style is “reapplied” somewhere in the document. It’s better to set table contents in their own style. So, select the whole table and create a new style for Table body, Table heads/stubs, and any other style it needs to use.

Then, you can set attributes for the table contents such as a smaller hanging indent for bullets or smaller font size by modifying each of those Styles.

Set the Borders

On the Table Design ribbon, click the Borders icon at the right edge and apply borders (rules) to the rows and columns according to your document’s requirements. Pay attention to which cell the cursor is in, as borders are applied to that cell only. To apply borders to a whole column or row, select it first.

To Indent Cell Contents

To manually indent table contents or insert a tab space within a table cell, hitting the tab key doesn’t work. That just jumps the cursor to the next table cell! To indent contents of a cell, either move the slider on the ruler or hold down the option key, then hit the tab key. (Windows users should hold the alt key then press tab.)

Set Alignment of Contents

Left, right, or centre alignment of table contents can be set from the Home ribbon, as with any other content. It’s also possible to set margins, an indent, a hanging indent, and more on the ruler. Just drag the related element (discussed in a coming post).

To align numbers, it’s most useful to use the “align on decimal” option on the ruler.

a map "locator pin" styled as the MS Word logo

Check out all the other posts in this series about Working with Tables and learn all about them in the multimedia ebook self-study course!

In the coming Word Wrangling Wednesday posts, we’ll talk about tidying up cell border alignments, creating spanning heads, and the like.



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Working With Tables: Navigating and Selecting

Watch this video demo: https://youtu.be/o7sk6VrePTA.

Moving Between Table Cells

The easiest way to move between cells in a table is to use the mouse to click on the cell you want. Pressing the tab key will jump the cursor to the next cell, left to right, as is the English reader’s habit. Hold down shift to tab backwards.

Selecting Cells

To select a single cell, triple-click on its contents using the mouse.

Keeping your hands on the keys is often a faster option:

  1. Place the cursor at the start of the text you want to select.
  2. Hold shift while you arrow to the end of your selection.

Selecting Whole Rows or Columns

Using the mouse

Hover the pointer just outside the edge of the table either above the column you want to select or to the left of the desired row. When the pointer turns into an arrow, click the mouse.

To select more rows/columns, keep holding down the mouse button while you drag the pointer across them. Just release the mouse to finish selecting.

Using the ribbon

Click somewhere in the desired row or column. Then on the Layout ribbon, click the Select icon at the far left, then choose from the options.

Troubleshooting

It is possible to select a row by dragging the cursor from one edge to the other. But if you don’t select the marker at the end of the row, it selects only the cells, not the whole row.

a map "locator pin" styled as the MS Word logo

Check out all the other posts in this series about Working with Tables and learn all about them in the multimedia ebook self-study course!



Got a gnarly Word problem? Submit your problem and we’ll try to answer it in the Q&A thread.



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© This blog and all materials in it are copyright Adrienne Montgomerie on the date of publication. All rights reserved. No portion may be stored or distributed without express written permission. Asking is easy!

Working with Tables: Tidying Up Spanning Heads

In this series on working with tables, we’ve converted text into proper tables, detected them, navigated within them, and styled them. Now we’ll dive into to tidying them up.

Some of the things that make tables messy are heads that don’t span what they should, misaligned columns, data that doesn’t align, and headers that should repeat on each page. Let’s start with the first issue: getting the spanning heads right. (Check out the demo video at the end, too.)

Create spanning heads

Making a header that stretches over several columns takes just two clicks:

  1. Click and drag over the cells you want to turn into the spanning head, then
  2. right-click on the selection, and choose “merge cells” from the context menu that pops up.

Alternatively to step 2, you may select the Merge Cells icon on the [table] Layout ribbon shown below.

When the cursor is placed within a table, a second Layout ribbon appears. That is where you find the Merge set of icons. (Mac shown here, Windows shown below.)
The Windows version has nearly identical Layout ribbon.

Word will combine all the contents of the selected cells into a single cell that spans the selected columns. It’s especially handy that all the contents are combined in cases where the writer tried to fake a spanning header. Just remember to delete the extra line breaks this merging of content creates.

Remove spanning heads

If instead, you need to make a head span fewer columns, you can select the Split Cells icon on the [table] Layout ribbon. Word then asks how many columns to split it into; enter the number of columns right and column edges should line up automatically. Next week we’ll look at how to clean them up if they don’t align.

The contents of the spanning head can be styled as you would other table contents.

Troubleshooting

Sometimes the changes that were made to a table leave all kinds of background code that make a mess of what you’re trying to clean up. Sometimes, adding a row and starting fresh is easier than fixing all the errors. Occasionally, it’s easier to create a whole new table and do it right the first time.

You may want to turn off Track Changes while you format the table as all the tracking can obscure important changes made to table contents that you want to be sure the authors do vet. A comment could be left summarizing the formatting changes if the authors are concerned.

a map "locator pin" styled as the MS Word logo

Check out all the other posts in this series about Working with Tables and learn all about them in the multimedia ebook self-study course!



Got a gnarly Word problem? Submit your problem and we’ll try to answer it in the Q&A thread.



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© This blog and all materials in it are copyright Adrienne Montgomerie on the date of publication. All rights reserved. No portion may be stored or distributed without express written permission. Asking is easy!

Working With Tables: Is it Even a Table?

How do you know if text is in a table? In the first post in this series, we saw that tab marks and multiple spaces can help you spot text that has been “typewritered” into a table. Gridlines are a dead giveaway that you’re looking at a table, but what if there are no gridlines? How can you tell then?

  1. Click “view gridlines.”
  2. Look for cell end characters.
  3. Look for the Layout ribbon.

These are all really quick checks. Here’s how to do each one.

View Gridlines

  1. Place the cursor in the suspect text.
  2. On the Home ribbon, click the Borders icon in the Paragraph group to open the drop-down menu of options (shown at right).
  3. Click on View Gridlines.
  4. If the light-grey borders appear, revealing a table, you win!

Cell End Characters

cell end character
  1. On the Home ribbon, click the Show/Hide ¶ icon, or press the shortcut:
    Mac: cmd + 8
    Windows: ctrl + *
  2. Look for cell end characters at the end of what would be cells. They look like a blue circle with blue lines radiating out from the “corners.” (shown here)

Layout Ribbon

  1. Place the cursor in the suspect text.
  2. Look at the ribbon for a tab called Layout. If that has appeared, it’s probably a table. 99.9% certain.

Demo Video

See these tips in action!

Troubleshooting

Text may be in a text box rather than a table. If this is the case, you can see the border of the box when you click on the text, or when you right-click on the text, the context menu that pops open will contain the option to Edit Text.

a map "locator pin" styled as the MS Word logo

Check out all the other posts in this series about Working with Tables and learn all about them in the multimedia ebook self-study course!



Got a gnarly Word problem? Submit your problem and we’ll try to answer it in the Q&A thread.



Learn with us! Join a course today.

© This blog and all materials in it are copyright Adrienne Montgomerie on the date of publication. All rights reserved. No portion may be stored or distributed without express written permission. Asking is easy!

Working With Tables: Converting from Plain Text

Organizing data into tables is one of the best practices in clear communication according to several pervasive style guides and according to plain language principles. Word can make tables easy to work with, even if your author has treated the screen like a typewriter and kludged a table together with tab marks and spaces.

Converting Text to Tables

If tabs and multiple spaces have been used to create a table, one of the kindest things an editor can do for a production department is convert that mess into a true table. If the stars align, that task can be as simple as this:

  1. Select the whole mess, then
  2. click the Table icon on the Insert ribbon and
  3. select Insert Table from the options.

Word will automagically convert the tab marks into table cells populated with the content you selected. It will likely be necessary to clean up the cells after this conversion to eliminate multiple space marks used to create manual indenting, etc. But it saves a lot of clicking and dragging!

Be sure to proofread your change to make sure that contents ended up in the correct cells.

Troubleshooting

Do save a reference copy of the table before you try these tricks. You will probably need it to check that the content remains arranged as intended.

If the manual table created multi-line cells with a combination of tab marks and spaces, the conversion will not be clean. You’ll still have to drag contents into their correct cells and delete superfluous non-printing marks.

Blank cells can also wreak havoc on alignment and order. Sometimes, it is just less work to create the table with brute force, dragging each cell’s contents into place one at a time. This is a great task to subcontract out if there are a lot of such tables.

a map "locator pin" styled as the MS Word logo

Check out all the other posts in this series about Working with Tables and learn all about them in the multimedia ebook self-study course!



Got a gnarly Word problem? Submit your problem and we’ll try to answer it in the Q&A thread.



Learn with us! Join a course today.

© This blog and all materials in it are copyright Adrienne Montgomerie on the date of publication. All rights reserved. No portion may be stored or distributed without express written permission. Asking is easy!

Create Uncommon Fractions

Type 1/2 in a Word document and Word with automatically change that to stacked fraction, if you haven’t changed the default autocorrect settings. But type 2/3, and nothing happens. How can you get all fractions to match? It can take some expert typesetting.

In Word’s Preferences (Mac) or Options > Proofing from the File ribbon (Windows), go to the AutoFormat tab to set whether or not fractions will be replaced with a character when one exists in that font family.

The problem is that not all fonts contain a full range of fractions, so you might not be able to insert even a common fraction like two-thirds. The character viewer in the operating system and in Word’s “insert symbol” option on the Home ribbon used to show 1/4 and 1/2 characters, but those are not appearing at the moment.

Typography experts have explained elsewhere that sometimes we just have to insert a note to the typographer in a manuscript, saying that we want a true fraction. The typographer then has to create a kind of glyph (or maybe a ligature) from scratch.

It’s weird that 2/3 isn’t built in, but odd fractions like 4/9 or 11/5 will always have to be created from scratch.

Option 1: Leave a Note to Production

Be sure to tell your compositor/typesetter in a cover letter that these fractions need to be created. Also specify whether they should be stacked with a horizontal line or a slash. In the manuscript, you might help these stand out by setting them in double [[ ]] square brackets (which is easy to search and will most likely be queried by the proofreader so they don’t make it into print).

Option 2: Create Fractions with Equation Editor

Create your own fractions in Word using the Equation icon on the Insert ribbon. Just select the stacked fraction option, then click on each box (above and below the line) to enter the numbers. This does, however, create uneven line spacing.

Clicking Word’s Equation icon on the Insert ribbon opens this Equation Tools/Design tab on a Windows computer. (The Mac version is simply titled Equation. Click the Fraction icon to start.

Option 3: Brute Force Equations on Your Own

If creating a special character from scratch isn’t an option (e.g., this text is being typeset for the web) then you might choose to make all fractions plain old in-line numbers separated by a solidus/slash. Or, fake it:

Through a combination of super- and subscript with a slash, it is possible to fake your own fraction ligature. To set a fraction so that it looks like a character, set the 4 as a superscript and the 9 as a subscript (using the icons on the Home ribbon).

The good news is that this “works” in any font, and survives changes to the font and probably can be imported into design software with minimal fuss and/or formatting loss. The bad news is, this can look really weird in some font families.



Got a gnarly Word problem? Submit your problem and we’ll try to answer it in the Q&A thread.



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© This blog and all materials in it are copyright Adrienne Montgomerie on the date of publication. All rights reserved. No portion may be stored or distributed without express written permission. Asking is easy!

Eliminate Paragraph Breaks at the End of Every Line With This Find & Replace Sequence

Remember that satisfying gear-wind and ding of shoving the carriage return back to the left of the page at the end of every line? Some writers do! But Word is not a typewriter. There should be a little pop-up confirmation box when a writer tries to hit the return key at the end of every line. And if they try to hit it twice to create double spacing, a captcha should pop-up, asking if they really want to insert two manual paragraph breaks.

Continue reading Eliminate Paragraph Breaks at the End of Every Line With This Find & Replace Sequence

Word’s Style Gallery

Along the Home ribbon, if the window is wide enough, you can see several Styles for words and paragraphs. Unlike the font and size selections at the left edge of the ribbon, Style sets standard attributes for each kind of text: normal, body, headings, footers, and even comment balloons. And those attributes can be changed throughout a document with a single modification to the style.

Continue reading Word’s Style Gallery

Fix Extra Line Spaces

pretzel shaped as a reverse P, the pilcrow paragraph mark

Extra line spaces in a manuscript create layout problems. Whether they were used to create paragraph spacing or start a new page, manual line spacing just isn’t the best practice. What works more elegantly in the workflow is setting the paragraph spacing and using manual page breaks. But first, get rid of those extra line breaks and hard returns!

Just like the extra spaces in last week’s post, there’s no reason to be hunting and destroying extra line spaces by eye, one at a time. With a simple find and replace, MS Word can rid the file of these unwanted artifacts with just a click (or two).

Easy Steps to Rid the Manuscript of Unneeded Line Spaces

Continue reading Fix Extra Line Spaces

Turn Double Spaces into Single with Just a Click

Whether it’s a holdover from the old days or someone following APA’s guide from a few years ago, every editor will eventually see a manuscript that has two spaces after every period. Because modern layout software handles sentence spacing better than typewriters did, these double spaces are no longer necessary and can, in fact, create weirdly large spacing. One of the routine things an editor (or compositor) does is strip out those double spaces. But there’s no reason to be doing this by eye, one at a time. With a simple find and replace, MS Word can rid the file of these ancient artifacts with just a click.

How to Turn Two Spaces into One

Continue reading Turn Double Spaces into Single with Just a Click