

Please let me know how to tell Word:Mac to stop interfering with the formatting and let me decide things for myself. It is taking me forever to circumvent the "genius" that is WORD's AI. (I would have indented the items above fore better clarification, but this forum window won't allow bullet points to be indented).Īs you can see, with every new line / bullet point, there are a plethora of commands that I have to type in order to just have NORMAL 's a HUGE waste of time.

I ndent 3 times (automatically Bolded/Italicized/Underlined based on previous "Indent 3 times" formatting, even though I asked it NOT to do this).Indent Twice (automatically Italicized/Underlined based on previous "Indent Twice" formatting, even though I asked it NOT to do this).Indent Once (automatically Italicized based on previous "Indent Once" formatting, even though I asked it NOT to do this).To give you an idea, here is a sample bullet point list. Paste and match the style of the text where you’re pasting: Choose Edit > Paste and Match Style. So, I'm constantly having to UNFormat things that I never asked to be formatted in the first place (but WORD just assumes that I want.even though I UNchecked the button that supposedly gives me this freedom). Click where you want the text to appear, then do one of the following: Paste the text with its current formatting into a new paragraph: Choose Edit > Paste, or press Command-V on the keyboard. However, every time I go to a new line (i.e.: bullet point), WORD looks at the bullet point that came before it that is on the same vertical plane (which could be the bullet point just above it, or 4 bullet points ago), and it formats this new bullet point UNchecked this box so that I dictate the formatting style of each and every line. I went to Tools>AutoCorrect>AutoFormat as You Type>"Format beginning of list item exactly like the one before it" and Some of the bullet points are bolded/underlined/italicized.some are not. I'm using the "Notebook" layout for a bullet point list that I'm creating for a class. Enter the title of your book or whatever text you would like to appear at the top of your pages. Under the ‘Insert’ tab, select the ‘Header’ menu and click on ‘Edit Header.’ 2. User shouldn't be able to override the software's decision. Here’s how to properly format your headers and footers on a Microsoft document before printing, for both a Mac and PC: 1.
WORD FOR MAC 2011 COPY FORMAT TEXT SOFTWARE
I'm starting to remember why I dislike some MS products.in their zeal to think of everything, the programmers sometimes program the software to assume that it is smarter than the user, that it automatically knows what is best for the user and that the
