Showing posts with label MSword. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MSword. Show all posts

Monday, July 8, 2013

How To Create Custom Keyboard Shortcuts For Office 2013

Everyone knows that common keyboard shortcuts not only improves your productivity but also increases your overall typing speed. However, not all actions on Office 2013 have default keyboard shortcuts, some of these common actions include, changing font color or size and strike through text.
                    Assigned Key
It would be fun to have shortcuts for these actions though especially when you have to do them over and over and over again.
In this post, we’ll show you how to assign shortcuts to these actions. This trick we are showing you works for almost all commands you can find on Office 2013, namely Word, PowerPoint and Excel, the more common Office products.

Custom Keyboard Shortcuts For Word 2013

Out of the 3 Office products we’ll be featuring here, only Word has the option to use custom keyboard combinations to trigger an action. Keys that we suggest to use would be a combination of Ctrl, Shift and Alt followed by a letter.
Here are some examples:
Start Word 2013 and navigate to the Options section by clicking on File > Options.
                      Word 2013 Options
Then navigate to Customize Ribbon and you’ll find ‘Keyboard shortcuts’; click on the Customizebutton next to it.
                      Word Keyboard Shortcuts
Let’s first explain the things you see on this new window that pops up.
Commands are the actions you normally do on Word, for example Bold and Italics. These commands are in Categories based on the tabs in Word, e.g. the ‘Home’ tab or ‘Page Layout tab.
This arrangement means you’ll easily find the command you want to customize as a keyboard shortcut.
                  Customize Keyboard Word
We’ll now demonstrate how to add a keyboard shortcut to the Strike through command on Word. You’ll notice there is no shortcut key for Strike through — the ‘Current keys’ box is empty.
                  No Shortcut Key
Click on the ‘Press new shortcut key‘ box and personalize a keyboard combination shortcut. In this case, we used Alt + S.
You can see that the combination Alt + S is not taken because it’s unassigned. This is important as you do not want to double assign a combination. After that click on Assign.
                   Keyboard Shortcut
You can see all the assigned shortcuts you have for each command in the ‘Current keys’ box. If it is empty that means you have yet to assign a shortcut to the command. Click Close when you’re done.
                  Assigned Key
Now whenever you highlight text with your mouse, you can press Alt + S to Strike through it. Again, this is not just limited to Strike through but any command you set with a keyboard shortcut combination.

Keyboard Shortcuts For PowerPoint & Excel 2013

There are some limitations creating shortcuts on PowerPoint and Excel as you don’t get as much flexibility compared to Word. However, adding keyboard shortcuts is simpler for both PowerPoint and Excel.
Let’s use the example of the Auto Sum button. When you need the values of certain fields added up together, you use the Auto Sum function. It’s handy to have a keyboard shortcut assigned to that if you are doing your bookkeeping, for instance.
To add a keyboard shortcut to Auto Sum, right-click on it and select ‘Add to Quick Access Toolbar.
                   Excel Shortcut
It’ll be added to the top left corner of Excel, in the same row as the ‘Save’ and ‘Undo’ icons.
                  Excel Quick Icon
To activate this shortcut, all you have to do is hit the Alt key on your keyboard. You’ll see a number corresponding to the shortcut, in this case it’s the number 4 that activates the Auto Sum command.
                  Excel Key
You can do the same thing to any other command or action you need to use on both PowerPoint and Excel (this also works for Word). Just right click on the button and Add it to Quick Access Toolbar.
                 PowerPoint

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

How to Recover Unsaved Documents in MS Office

          

Word, Excel, and PowerPoint all have a new feature that saves documents that you've neglected to save when you closed them—including documents that you haven't even bothered to save with a name more specific than "Document1." This feature builds on Office's long-standing autosave feature, which automatically backs up the current version of your document every ten minutes (or whatever interval you set in the app's options). Earlier versions of Office deleted the last of these automated backups when you closed a document, but Office 2010 preserves the last automated backup and lets you open it. Click File, Recent, Recover Unsaved Documents, and then choose the document from a standard File/Open dialog box.

Insert Screen Clips in PowerPoint (or Word)

               Insert Screen Clips in PowerPoint (or Word)

Word and PowerPoint now make it easy to insert screen captures into a document by selecting Screenshot from the Insert tab. Doing so launches a gallery of currently open windows, and you can click one to insert an image of the window into your document (or you can click Screen Clipping, and drag the mouse to select the screen region that you want to clip and paste into your document). When you press Enter, the screen capture gets inserted automatically.
Bonus tip: Here's how to get a screen shot of the app you're running—something that's normally impossible because Word and PowerPoint disappear while you drag the mouse to make a screen clip. If you want to make a screen shot of PowerPoint to use in PowerPoint (as I did in this image), simply use Word to take the screen shot, and drag the image from Word into PowerPoint.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Disable the Mini Toolbar and Live Preview in Word 2013

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The Mini Toolbar and Live Preview are features in Word introduced in Word 2007 and continued in Word 2010 and 2013. They can be useful for quick formatting and to preview possible formats. However, if these features annoy you, they are easy to disable.
The Mini Toolbar in Word 2013 pops up when you select text in a document and provides quick access to formatting tools.
Live Preview allows you to preview how a specific feature, such as style sets, will affect your document as you hover over the different choices for that feature.
To disable one or both of these features in Word 2013, click the FILE tab.
Click Options in the list on the left side of the screen.
Make sure the General option is selected on the left side of the Word Options dialog box. In the User Interface options section, select the Show Mini Toolbar on selection check box so there is NO check mark in the box to disable the Mini Toolbar. Select the Enable Live Preview check box so it is also empty to disable this feature. Click OK to accept the changes and close the Word Options dialog box.
These settings are also available in the same location in Word 2010 and 2007, although the General screen on the Word Options dialog box in Word 2007 is called Popular.
If you find you need one of these features again, simply open the Word Options dialog box and select the desired check box again to enable the feature.