Advertisement Microsoft Word now arrives on our systems Microsoft Office 2016 is here and it's time for you to make a decision. The productivity question is -- should you upgrade? We give you the new features and the fresher reasons to help you. To help shape the layout of your document. Microsoft has created a pretty good system: immensely open for an absolute novice, but with enough depth to be consistently used throughout the business world. Customizing your document layout settings is easy, and we’ll show you how to do it in You don't want to upgrade to Microsoft Office 2016 or you were upgraded automatically?
We show you how you can downgrade or stay with Microsoft Office 2013, whether you're a home or business user. What Can You Change?
Many, many things. We’ll Default settings rarely meet the needs of every user. Here we present five easy tweaks that allow you to adapt Microsoft Office 2016 to your preferences. You see immediately when opening a new Word document, with a focus on the Home, Insert, Design, and Layout tabs as they contain the bulk of the document customization tools you’ll need. • Home: Fonts, Paragraphs, and Styles, as well as Clipboard and Editing options • Insert: Tables, Illustrations, Media, Headers & Footers, Text Boxes, and Symbols • Design: Themes, including colors and fonts, and Page Backgrounds • Layout: Page Setup, Paragraphs, and Arrange These are your manual tools. You can set up a range of formatting options before you begin editing your document to ensure the same structure and style is applied throughout, as well as using the same tools to edit your document when work is in progress.
Nov 27, 2015 You can switch from one to the other by going to Word> Preferences - General. Select the one you prefer from the Office Theme dropdown & confirm OK when prompted that the change affects all Office 2016 programs.
You’re probably familiar with how to change the Font, colors, sizes, and how to apply the Bold, Italicized and underlined formats to your text. These are easily applied. Styles But it can be much faster and usually much easier to apply pre-designed Styles to your document as you move through. The Styles are made up of individual settings, so always apply the same formatting to your document. There is a Style for “Heading 1” which will appear the same within a web-page. There is a “Title” Style which applies a 28pt font and condenses the text slightly.
There is a “Quote” Style which applies an indent to the left and right of the document, italicizes your text, and grants it a different color. For instance. This was a very quick snippet illustrating how to apply basic Styles to your document. Play around with the other styles and learn how they affect the visual presentation of your work, and what a difference that can make to your reader (and also to your own workflow!). Create Your Own Style You’re super stylish, right? Good, because I’m not. I have a big ginger beard and everything.
Enough of that. In the video I showed you how to access the additional Styles menu. It is the tiny arrow indicating there is a pop-out menu awaiting your inspection. Alternatively, hit CTRL + SHIFT + ALT + S. At the bottom of the new Styles menu are three icons: • New Style: Pretty self-explanatory.
If you find yourself frequently tweaking a specific facet of your Word document layout, you should absolutely turn it into an easily applicable custom Style. • Style Inspector: The Style Inspector can be pretty handy if you receive a document with lots of new and “unusual” formatting.
Just open the inspector and select the area of the document you’d like to know more about. You can also reset the formatting for the selected text from within the inspector, using the red eraser icons on the right. • Manage Styles: You can use the Manage Styles option to make any alterations to existing Styles, including your own. When creating your own Style, you don’t have to start from scratch. The options Style type and Base style on can be handy to make slight tweaks to existing styles, suiting them for your editing needs. Just be sure to save them as something different! Themes Nestled in the Design tab are options for Themes and Document Formatting.
After upgrading to the new Mac OS X operating system, a lot of people have problem to play AVI files on QuickTime player 10, others complain that it takes long hours to convert AVI into MOV files for playing with QuickTime 10. Quicktime player for mac 10.2.8. Solution to play AVI files on QuickTime Player 10 To get AVI files played on QuickTime Player 10, some people suggest to download and, which can work with some older media formats.