Learning The Basics of Microsoft Word
Learning The Basics of Microsoft Word
The Basics...................................................................................... 2
Other ............................................................................................ 18
Bulleted and Numbered Lists ................................................... 18
Undo ........................................................................................ 18
Spell Check.............................................................................. 19
AutoCorrect.............................................................................. 19
Auto Format ........................................................................ 21
At the top of the window is the Title Bar – it shows the program you are using (Word)
and the name of the document. Because this document has not yet been saved, it is
given a document number.
Below the Title Bar is the Menu Bar which allows you to open menus and select options
from the drop down menu items.
Below the Menu bar is the Toolbar, a collection of icons which are shortcuts to the most
commonly used options. You can choose which Toolbars to display.
The Ruler will display below the Toolbars if you have chosen to have the Ruler display.
The Ruler can help you see where the margins and tabs are set, and lets you see
measurement in your document.
The white blank area below the Ruler (or below the Toolbars if the Ruler is not visible) is
the body of your document. This is where you enter the content of your document.
Below the main body of your document are the View buttons. The choices are normal
view, web layout view, print layout view, and outline view. In the example below,
print layout is selected (it looks like it is pressed in).
Below the View buttons, the Drawing toolbar will display (if you have chosen that as
one of the toolbars to display).
At the bottom of the window is the Status bar, which tells you which page, section,
page x of y and current position of the cursor.
Create a Document
If you don’t already have a blank document open,
1. open a blank document
2. type your name and something about yourself.
3. Click on the Save icon on the toolbar , or File, then Save. Notice the Save in
window that opens. You need to make sure you pay attention to where the file is
being saved. Because your file has a document number rather than a file name,
you are prompted to give your document a name. The Save as type
automatically defaults to Word Document (giving the file an extension of doc). It
is not necessary to type in the .doc but it doesn’t hurt if you do either.
4. After you have chosen a name and where you want to save the file, click on
Save or press enter.
Close your document by clicking the X in the upper right-hand corner of the Menu bar.
Note, if you have more than one document open, there will not be an X in the upper
right-hand corner of the menu bar. When you have multiple documents open, clicking
on the X in the upper right-hand corner of the Title bar will close only that document. If
you have only one document open, clicking on the X in the upper right-hand corner of
the Title bar will close the document and exit Microsoft Word.
Open a Document
1. Click on the Open icon or File, then Open. The Open dialog box opens.
2. If the file you want to open is not in the current folder, browse to the drive and
folder which contains your file, highlight the file and click on Open (or press
enter).
You can also look near the bottom of the File menu and the most recent documents you
have accessed will be listed. I have mine set to list the most recent 4, but you can
customize that setting. We will discuss customizing your options in a few minutes. To
open one of these files, click on the listing and that file will open.
Now that you have opened your document, we will add a graphic.
1. Place your cursor where you want to insert the image. If you need to go down
the page lower than your cursor will let you move, press enter a few times to add
blank lines. The cursor will only move down or to the right if there is something
on that line (even if it is only a hard return or a space).
2. Once you get the cursor where you want to insert the image, click on Insert from
the menu bar, position your mouse on Picture which will expand out your
choices for what type of picture. Choose Clip Art and find a clip art image to
insert into your document.
3. Save your document. You will notice that because your document had a name
instead of document number, you were not prompted to give the file a name. It
replaced the older version of your document with the new version. Once you
have saved the file, there is no way to get back the old version.
4. A habit I would recommend is choosing Save As instead of save. You can then
give your document a new name. If you want to keep the same document name
and discard the older version, you can just press enter when the Save In window
opens.
Customizing Word Options
You can customize Word tools and options.
One of the first things you will probably want to do is change the menu bar so it expands
to show all the commands available under a particular heading instead of the most
recently used.
1. Click on Tools, then Customize. The window shown below will open.
2. Click on the Options tab, and remove the check mark from the second item
under Personalized Menus and Toolbars – Menus show recently used
commands first.
3. Close
You can change the typeface, style, size, color and effects.
1. Click on Format
2. Choose Font
3. When the dialog box (shown below) opens, edit the font as desired.
Margins
1. You can set the page margins by clicking on File then Page Setup. The window
shown below will open.
2. From the Margins tab, you can set the top, bottom, left and right margins. In the
Apply to box, you can choose whether to apply the settings to the whole
document or from this point forward. You can either click on the up and down
arrows to change the value in the margins box, or you can click in the box and
type in the margin value you want.
3. If you want this new setting to be the new default setting for your margins, click
on Default at the bottom of the window.
4. You can also specify how far from the edge of the page you want the header
and/or footer.
You can also set the left and right margins using the ruler bar. Point to the margin
boundary on the ruler bar – when the mouse pointer changes to a double arrow
drag the margin boundary left or right to decrease or increase the margin.
1. Click on the Paper Size tab to choose the paper size and orientation (portrait or
landscape).
2. Click on the Paper Source tab to choose which tray you want the printer to pull
from for the first page and for other pages. The safest way to print something on
special paper (such as labels) is to set the paper source to be manual. Then it
won’t print until you feed the paper you want into the manual feed tray. This will
avoid the problem of someone else’s document printing on the labels you put in
the regular paper tray.
The last tab is Layout. If you wanted to center the page vertically (up and down) on the
page, you would click on the arrow in the vertical alignment field and choose center
(the choices are top, center, justified and bottom). The default vertical alignment is top.
This is also the tab where you can set headers and footers to be different for even and
odd pages, or set the headers and footers to be different on the first page than on other
pages.
Alignment (horizontal)
You can choose alignment of text or images to be left, right, centered, or justified. You
can click on Format then Paragraph then Alignment, or use the icons on the toolbar
t
Center
Justified
Left
Right
Format Paragraph allows you options for alignment, indentation, and line spacing.
Widow/Orphan control allows you to set whether a single line of a paragraph is on one
page while the rest of the paragraph is on another page. Widow/orphan control stops
this from happening.
Widow – the last line of a paragraph that appears at the top of a page by itself
Orphan – the first line of a paragraph that appears at the bottom of a page by itself
Tabs
1. You can set tabs in the ruler by clicking where you want to set tab stops. The
default is left aligned tab, but you can change that by double clicking where you
want to set the tab which opens up the same tabs box you would see if you
2. Click on Format then Tabs (see below). Set the tab position, alignment and
leader, then click Set. Continue for each tab stop needed, then click OK. (You
can also change the tab alignment by clicking on the tab type button at the far left
on the ruler bar.)
You could use Leader #2 to create a table of contents like this one:
Create a table that has 3 columns and 3 rows and click OK. You now have a table in
your page.
1. To get from one cell to the next in the same row, use the Tab key.
2. To move from one row to the next, use your up and down arrows.
3. To tab within a table cell use CTRL+tab.
There are other ways to set borders, but this is the easiest for me. If you do not
want any border to print with your table, choose no border.
While working with a table, it is easier for me to have the gridlines show. To hide the
gridlines
1. Click on Table
2. Click on Hide Gridlines.
If you have hidden the gridlines and decide you want to see them, click on Table
then click on Show Gridlines. If you have chosen no border and have gridlines
showing, they will display in your document but will not print.
You can also set a border for an entire page.
1. From the menu bar, choose Format
2. Select Borders and Shading.
3. Click on the Page Border tab, choose the setting, then select your border style,
color, and width. Make sure the Apply to section at the right says Whole
Document.
4. If you want a fancy border, below border style, color and width is a box Art –
choose from one of the fancy art borders.
For this exercise, enter data into your table. Let’s create a header row with labels for
what is contained in each column. If your table has three columns, enter column
headings of Name, Address, and Phone. In the second row, type in your name,
address and phone in the appropriate columns. Enter data into the third row.
After you have entered a phone number into the last column of the third row, press tab,
and a fourth row will be added. This is helpful if you aren’t sure how many rows your
table will need; the table will expand as data is added. Experiment with formatting the
borders, shading, font, etc. in the table you have created. Use CTRL+Tab to indent text
within a cell.
Experiment with gridlines by changing your table borders to “none” and alternating
between Show Gridlines and Hide Gridlines.
Other
Bulleted and Numbered Lists
You can create bulleted and numbered lists easily with Word. The problem comes
when you want to discontinue the list.
Undo
If you make a change and for some reason, you do not like the change, or it messes up
your document, you will appreciate one of the most important functions in Word - Undo.
You simply click on the Undo icon or press Crtl + z. This will undo the last
change you made. You can undo a number of items by clicking on the arrow next to the
undo icon and selecting down to the last item you want to undo. You cannot pick
individual items in that list – you must step back (undo) all items above it in the
list. You can click undo a number of times until you have restored the document to the
state you desire, or find the action you want to undo in the list.
Spell Check
Word Spell Check is very useful, but not a substitute for proofreading. Remember, it will
only detect a word it thinks is misspelled, not a word that is not used correctly. You can
add words you frequently use to the dictionary for which Word does not know the
correct spelling.
AutoCorrect
1. Click on Tools
2. Choose AutoCorrect…
The screens below show the dialog box and the option tabs.
AutoFormat is part of the AutoCorrect function, but this controls settings and what
happens when you choose to apply AutoFormat. Below is the setting within
AutoCorrect for setting options for AutoFormat.
AutoFormat can be found under Format. When you choose AutoFormat, the
following window opens. If you click on Options from this window, the dialog box above
would appear. Document types to select are General document, Letter, or Email.
You can choose whether to have Word perform AutoFormat now or AutoFormat and
review each change.
Keyboard Shortcuts
Function key
Press To
F8 Extend a selection
Press To
Press To
*Spike - A special AutoText entry that stores multiple items that you’ve deleted. Microsoft Word appends
one item to another until you paste the contents as a group in a new location in your document. You can
also use the Office Clipboard to get the same result.
Press To
Press To
ALT+F7 Find the next misspelling or grammatical error. The Check spelling
as you type check box must be selected (Tools menu, Options
dialog box, Spelling & Grammar tab).
Press To
ALT+SHIFT+F9 Run GOTOBUTTON or MACROBUTTON from the field that displays the
field results
Press To
Press To
CTRL + b Bold
CTRL + i Italicize
CTRL + u Underline
CTRL + o Open
CTRL + p Print
CTRL + s Save
CTRL + c Copy
CTRL + v Paste
CTRL + x Cut
CTRL + z Undo
Oval Paste
Position Bold
Text Box Format Painter Italics
Word Art Undo Underline
Insert Clip Art Align Left
Redo
Fill Color Align Center
Record Macro
Line Color Insert Hyperlink Align Right
Track Changes Tables and Borders Justify
Font Color Insert Table
Extend Selection Numbering
Line Style Insert Excel Worksheet Bullets
Tips for Access, Excel, PowerPoint and Outlook are also available in that same
Grammar Check
Help
Be sure to set your view for “Web Layout View” (second icon from the left) and under
directory. Sue Carter updates those tips periodically from tips she receives via email.
Next Window in Word