Count On Word To Count Your Words
Count On Word To Count Your Words
Try it: Hit return after this line and type some words.
The status bar at the bottom of the window keeps a running count of the number of words in
the document.
Try it: Select File > Save As, and then select OneDrive and give this document a name.
If you sign in to Office 365 on another device, this document will be in your list of recent files.
You can pick up where you left off… even if you left the document open on the computer you’re
using now.
Share and collaborate
With this document saved in OneDrive, you can share it with others. They don’t even need Word
to open it.
Try it: Select Share, and send a link to this document. (keyboard shortcut – Alt+F+Z or Alt+Z+S)
You can send the link by typing someone’s email address or by copying the link and pasting it
into a message or chat. If you want them to read the document but not edit it, set their
permission to view-only.
If they don’t have Word, the document will open in their web browser, in Word Online.
Word works with Bing to give you access to thousands of pictures you can use in your
documents.
Try it: Hit enter after this line to make a blank line:
1. With your cursor in the blank space above, go to the Insert tab, select Online Pictures,
and then search for something, like puppy clip art.
To format text, select it, and then select a button in the Font or Paragraph area on the Home
tab.
Try it: Select text in the lines below and choose formatting options so that the text is an
example of the formatting it’s describing:
Highlight
Font color
Bullets
Numbering
Pro tip: If you selected whole words for this exercise, did you notice that Word popped up a
little toolbar, with the font formatting options?
See the little triangle when you mouse over those other
headings?
1. Put your cursor somewhere in the heading above (“Make magic: use Heading styles”) –
don’t select anything.
2. On the Home tab, find Styles, and select Heading 1 (keyboard shortcut Ctrl+Alt+1).
Ta-da! Now it looks like a heading, and acts like one too.
Give your doc an instant makeover
Style sets and themes let you completely change the look of your document in an instant. They
work best when your document is formatted with styles (so it’s good that we fixed that Heading
style, above).
1. On the Design tab, select Themes, and choose a theme from the drop-down.
Notice that the gallery of style sets updates to reflect the theme you picked.
2. Select any theme you like from the drop-down and click to apply.
Just for fun
If you have a little more time, give these a try.
Press Ctrl+H and use Find/Replace to replace all the instances of Try it with I tried it.
The Tell me search box takes you straight to commands and Help in Word.