their in the new a program such as Excel or Links aren't just document.

Similar documents
Introduction. Table Basics. Access 2010 Working with Tables. Video: Working with Tables in Access To Open an Existing Table: Page 1

DOING MORE WITH POWERPOINT: MICROSOFT OFFICE 2013

Microsoft Word 2010 Tables. 4/25/2011 Archdiocese of Chicago Mike Riley

FrontPage. Directions & Reference

Nauticom NetEditor: A How-to Guide

Introduction to Microsoft Excel

EXCEL BASICS: MICROSOFT OFFICE 2007

Correcting Grammar as You Type. 1. Right-click the text marked with the blue, wavy underline. 2. Click the desired option on the shortcut menu.

MICROSOFT WORD 2010 BASICS

Week 5 Creating a Calendar. About Tables. Making a Calendar From a Table Template. Week 5 Word 2010

EXCEL BASICS: MICROSOFT OFFICE 2010

PowerPoint Slide Basics. Introduction

WEEK NO. 12 MICROSOFT EXCEL 2007

MAKING TABLES WITH WORD BASIC INSTRUCTIONS. Setting the Page Orientation. Inserting the Basic Table. Daily Schedule

Introduction. Watch the video below to learn more about getting started with PowerPoint. Getting to know PowerPoint

Web-Friendly Sites. Planning & Design 1

Microsoft Excel 2010 Basic

Word Creating & Using Tables. IT Training & Development (818) Information Technology

FirmSite Control. Tutorial

Correcting Grammar as You Type

MS Office Word Tabs & Tables Manual. Catraining.co.uk Tel:

Introduction to Microsoft Office 2007

Creating Reports in Access 2007 Table of Contents GUIDE TO DESIGNING REPORTS... 3 DECIDE HOW TO LAY OUT YOUR REPORT... 3 MAKE A SKETCH OF YOUR

DOING MORE WITH WORD: MICROSOFT OFFICE 2013

Center for Faculty Development and Support Making Documents Accessible

Word 2007 Tables Objectives

Say you want a new blank document, just like the one Word shows you when you start the program. No problem here are the steps:

DOING MORE WITH WORD: MICROSOFT OFFICE 2010

Lecture- 5. Introduction to Microsoft Excel

FrontPage Help Center. Topic: FrontPage Basics

Microsoft Office Word 2010

Working with Tables in Word 2010

Step-by. A Very Warm Welcome to the Exciting World of Computers. Let s get Started It s easy with my Step- Instructions

What s New in Office 2010?

Microsoft Excel 2007

Introduction to Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2010

Excel Select a template category in the Office.com Templates section. 5. Click the Download button.

Microsoft Office 2010 Tutorial

ADOBE DREAMWEAVER CS4 BASICS

San Pedro Junior College. WORD PROCESSING (Microsoft Word 2016) Week 4-7

PRESENCE. RadEditor Guide. SchoolMessenger 100 Enterprise Way, Suite A-300 Scotts Valley, CA

DOING MORE WITH WORD: MICROSOFT OFFICE 2007

Working with Tables in Microsoft Word

INTRODUCTION... 1 UNDERSTANDING CELLS... 2 CELL CONTENT... 4

Creating a Presentation

Using Microsoft Excel

Using Microsoft Word. Tables

OU EDUCATE TRAINING MANUAL

Lesson Skill Matrix Skill Exam Objective Objective Number

Skill Exam Objective Objective Number

Software.LifeTips.com

Creating Visually Appealing Documents. Word Module 2. Diocese of St. Petersburg Office of Training

Introduction to MS Office Somy Kuriakose Principal Scientist, FRAD, CMFRI

B.Sc. VI SEM (CS+BIO)

Microsoft PowerPoint 2016 Part 2: Notes, Links, & Graphics. Choosing a Design. Format Background

On the Web sun.com/aboutsun/comm_invest STAROFFICE 8 DRAW

The HOME Tab: Cut Copy Vertical Alignments

The Ribbon The Ribbon contains multiple tabs, each with several groups of commands. You can add your own tabs that contain your favorite commands.

Electronic Portfolios in the Classroom

Excel 2013 Getting Started

MICROSOFT WORD XP INTERMEDIATE

Creating an with Constant Contact. A step-by-step guide

Choosing Paper Size and Layout. UP TO SPEED Of Menus and Boxes

Using the WYSIWYG HTML editor

Microsoft Office Training Skills 2010

Shape Cluster Photo Written by Steve Patterson

PowerPoint Instructions

Creating & Modifying Tables in Word 2003

Working with PDF s. To open a recent file on the Start screen, double click on the file name.

Excel The primary replacement for menus and toolbars in Office Excel 2007 is the Ribbon. Designed for easy browsing, the

Excel 2010: Getting Started with Excel

Excel 2016 Basics for Windows

Microsoft Excel Microsoft Excel

Text Box Frames. Format Text Box

Microsoft Excel 2010

EXCEL TUTORIAL.

Drawing Tools. Drawing a Rectangle

Intro To Excel Spreadsheet for use in Introductory Sciences

Open. Select the database and click. Print. Set printing options using the dropdown menus, then click the

DOING MORE WITH EXCEL: MICROSOFT OFFICE 2013

Excel 2013 Workshop. Prepared by

Word 2016 Advanced. North American Edition SAMPLE

PowerPoint Introduction

Excel. Excel Options click the Microsoft Office Button. Go to Excel Options

USER GUIDE. MADCAP FLARE 2017 r3. QR Codes

Microsoft Office 2010 consists of five core programs: Word, Excel,

Day : Date : Objects : Open MS Excel program. Subject : * Open Excel application. Select : start. Choose: programs. Choose : Microsoft Office

Workbook Also called a spreadsheet, the Workbook is a unique file created by Excel. Title bar

Understanding Word Processing

Inspiration Quick Start Tutorial

Creating Web Pages with SeaMonkey Composer

Solo 4.6 Release Notes

Microsoft Office 365 OneNote and Notebooks

Getting Started with Word

Word 3 Microsoft Word 2013

A Student s Guide to Taking Notes Using Microsoft Word 2013

Address Bar. Application. The space provided on a web browser that shows the addresses of websites.

ekaizen Lessons Table of Contents 1. ebook Basics 1 2. Create a new ebook Make Changes to the ebook Populate the ebook 41

HOW TO. In this section, you will find. miscellaneous handouts that explain. HOW TO do various things.

Excel 2016 Basics for Mac

Transcription:

Navigating with Hyperlinks Hyperlinks are those bits of underlinedd text or pictures that, when you click them, take you to a new place, like another Web page. Most people never think of adding links to their Word documents, because they'ree thinking of them as printed documents. However, if some of your readers may read your work onscreen, consider adding hyperlinks Word's hyperlinks are identical to the hyperlinks on Web sites. They even use the same programming language (HTML). Hyperlinks you create in Word stay intact if you save the file in a format other than Wordlike a PDF file or a Web page. And since other Office programs also use HTML, if you copy or cut the text and paste it in another document in a program such as Excel or PowerPoint, the hyperlink will work just fine in the new document. Links aren't just for Web pages anymore. Word lets you make hyperlinks that go alll sorts of places: Locations in your document. If your document refers to another section, addd a link so your readers can jump right there instead of scrolling. Other documents on your computer or network. If you're working with a group of people on an office network, hyperlinks to related shared documents can be very effective. When you click the link to a shared document, Word opens that

document even if it's not on your computer, as long as you have permission to open it. Documents on the Web. Whatever topic you're writing about, you can find related Web pages, photos, maps, news items, and blogs on the Internet. If you can find them, you can create hyperlinks for your readers. To create a hyperlink to any of the above places, the steps are almost the same. You select the text you want to turn into a hyperlink, and then, in the Insert Hyperlink box, you tell Word what to link it to: 1. Select the text for the link. Choose text that gives your readers a good clue to where the link goes. Two or three words is usually enough to catch your readers' attention. 2. Go to Insert Links Hyperlink to open the Insert Hyperlink dialog box. The Insert Hyperlink box looks much like a standard Windows Open file box, but there are some significant differences (Figure 2). In fact, the box is something of a chameleon and changes when you click the buttons on the left side. 3. On the left, in the "Link to" box, choose the type of link you want to create. You have several options: o Existing File or Web Page is the button to click if you want to link to another Word document on your own computer or network, or if you want to link to a Web page. Just to the right of the "Look in" drop-down menu, click the folder icon to browse your computer or network for documents (as shown in Figure 2). Double-click the document you want to link to. The Insert Hyperlink box closes, and Word creates the link. To link to a Web page, click the Internet icon in the upper-right corner (it looks like a globe under a magnifying glass) to open your Web browser and go to the Web page you wish to link to. After you've found the page in your browser, go back to the Insert Hyperlink box and once again click the Existing File or Web Page button. Word adds the address in your Web browser to the Address box. (It begins with http://, as do all good Web addresses.) Click OK to close the box and create the hyperlink. o Click Place in this Document if you're creating a link to help readers jump around in a long document. Within a document, Word can create links to either headings or bookmarks, and shows you a list of your choices. (If you don't have anything for Word to attach the link to, click Cancel to close the dialog box and create a bookmark, as described in the next section.)

o o Create New Document lets you create a hyperlink to a document you haven't even started yet. When you click Create New Document, the Insert Hyperlink box changes. Type the name of the new document you want to create in the "Name of new document" text box, and then click OK. Word creates and saves your new document on the spot. You can go back and add text to it later. Email Address creates a mailto hyperlink in your document. When you choose this option, the Edit Hyperlink box changes, as shown in Figure 2, so you can type the email address you want to link to. It's also helpful (but not necessary) to provide a Subject for the email. Click OK to close the box and create the link. Figure 2 Inserting Bookmarks Bookmarks, which mark a spot in your document, may seem like a somewhat mildexterior than you mannered Word tool, but more power is hidden under their Clark Kent may expect. Bookmarks come in handy in long documents because so many other features dependd on them:

Browsing by bookmark. You give each bookmark a name when you create it, and you see those names listed in the Go To dialog box (Home Editing Go To). You can then use these bookmarks to hop from place to place in your document. Indexing. Because bookmarks are based on selected text, you can create a bookmark that includes several pages. In this way, you can use bookmarks to create page ranges for building indexes, as described earlier in this chapter. Hyperlinks. When you create a hyperlink to a specificc point in your document, Word needs something to anchor the link to. That can be a heading or a bookmark that you've created at any point in the text. Creating Tables If you've never created a table in a Word document before, don't worryit's remarkably easy and even fun, especially if you use the drawing-with-the-mouse method. You can create tables by: Pointing at and clicking a minii table map. Chose Insert Table and click the grid that appears to size and create a table. Filling in numbers and clicking button in a dialog box. Choose Insert Table Insertt Table to open the Insert Table dialog box. Drawing your table on the page with your mouse. Choose Insert Table Draw Table to turn your cursor into a table-drawing tool.

Creating a Table from the Ribbon As always, the ribbon approach to the job is very visual, and it may seem vaguely familiar. It's a variation on the way you'd create tables in the last few versions of Word, where you'd click a button and drag out a grid that represented the table. Word's new method is even a little easier for newcomers to grasp. The drop-down menu presentss a 10 x 8 grid. You click to select the number of boxes you want in your table, as shown in Figure 5. Figure 5 1. On the ribbon, choose Insert Tables Table. A menu appears with what looks sort of like a bunch of boxes or a piece of graph paper Figure 5 2. Point to a box on the grid to create a table with the number of rows and columns you want. As you move your mouse over the grid, the boxes in the grid are highlighted, and you see the table appear on your page. (Tables use Microsoft's Live Preview feature that shows you what will happen if you click the mouse button.) A messagee above the grid on the menu keeps tally of the number of columns and

rows. You don't have to be exact; it's easy enough to create or delete columns and rows later. 3. Click the grid to create the table and place it in your document for real. Using the Insert Table Box The Insert Table dialog box is a more traditionaland boringway to createe a table. Choose Alt+ +N, TI to open the Insert Table box (Figure 6). The box is a simple affair. Just type numbers in the text boxes at the top for the columns and rows you need in your table. This dialog box also lets you choose the AutoFit behavior, as explained below: Fixed column width. Use this option if you want to limit columns to a specific width. Enter a number in the box next to this option to set the width of the columns. Or, if you choose Auto instead, Word creates a table that fits in your current margins, with the number of columns specified above, each of equal width. AutoFit to contents. With this option, the column width adjusts automatically to accommodate the amount of text you type in the cells. Use this option if you're not sure how much space your text will take up until you type it. AutoFit to window. This option is more suited to Web pages than printed documents. It makes the table expand and contract to fit a browser window. Web pages are designed to work on all different types of computers, PDAs, cell phones, TV sets, and who-knows-what in the future. AutoFit tables like these help Web designers create pages that work for screens and browsers with dramatically different capabilities. (Figure 6).

Drawing a Table As you can guess, the least mechanical and most creative way to make a table is to draw your own. It's a great technique if you need an irregularly shaped table. With Word's table tools you can draw tables, and divide them into columns and rows in just about any configuration imaginable. As you can see from Figure 7, you can do just about anything except make a curve. Here's how to use the table drawing tools to draw a fairly traditional table: 1. Choose Insert Tables Table Draww Table. Your mouse cursor changes into a pencil, inviting you to start drawing. Figure 7

2 On an empty place on the page, drag diagonally to draw your first rectangle (Figure 8). The rectangle that appears on your page marks the borders for your table. Soon you'll divvy it up, creating columns and rows inside. Word adds paragraphs, adjusts margins, and generally does whatever's necessary to place your table exactly where you draw it. The moment you release the mouse button, the Table Tools contextual tab appears on the right side of the ribbon. Two tabs appear in this contextual tab: Design and Layout. You're now on the Design tab, where you seee tools for formatting your table. On the right side, the Draw Table button is highlighted, indicating thatt you're in Draw Table mode. (Figure 8). 3.Next, drag to draw a vertical line to divide your table in half. Your line separates the table into two cells. You can draw lines wherever you want to divide your table into cells of just about any shape. When you drag diagonally, you create rectangles instead of lines. Rectangles turn into cells, or if they're far enough from the original table, they're new tables. Experiment to get a feeling for creating tables and cells. If you make an error, undo it with Ctrl+Z.

Next to the Draw Table button you find an Eraser button (Table Tools Design Draww Borders Eraser. If you click the button to highlight the eraser, then your mouse cursor changes to an eraser icon. Dragging it over lines in your table erases them. 4. Draw a horizontal line on the left half of your table. When you draw the horizontal line, you divide one of the cells into two cells, creating a new row. You can draw the line to the vertical divider or you can continue onto the right side of the table. This horizontal line creates two rows in your table. You can continue to divvy up your table into additional cells.

5. When you're done, click the Draw Table button (on the right side of the ribbon), to turn off the Draw Table mode. 10.7. Doing Math in Tables When presenting numbers in your document, whether it's a budget, or sales figures, or an inventory tally, you probably want to total some of the columns. Sure, you could add up the numbers on a calculator, and then type the totals into the cells. That's fine if you know the figures aren't going to change, and you're certain you won't transpose any figures between your calculator and the table. A better (though, admittedly, not necessarily easier) way is to insert one of Word's fields with instructions to sum the column above. Use the Formula button (Figure 9) on the Layout tab to insert the field into your table. (Figure 9)

1. Click to place the insertion point in the bottom cell of a column with numbers, and then go to Table Tools Layout Data Formula. The Formula dialog box opens (Figure 10) ). Word makes some assumptions based on the fact that the insertion point is at the bottom of a column of numbers. For example, the Formula box is preloaded with a formula designed to total the column of numbers. It's almost as readablee as plain English: =SUM(ABOVE). If your insertion point had been at the end of a row of numbers, the formula would have read: =SUM(LEFT). 2. In the Formula box, check to make sure the formula does what you want, and then click OK. Word inserts the field code in the cell, and then it runs the calculationin this case, a sum, which then shows up in the cell. Figure 10). It's not unusual to have several columns that you want to total. If that's the case, you can select the cell with the SUM field, and then press Ctrl+C to copy it. Then move the insertion point to the next cell, and then press Ctrl+V to paste it.