How the F do you adjust the margins in Microsoft Office 2007 so the borders you select actually print out. Please be detailed as possible as 2007 is new to me.
How the F do you adjust the margins in Microsoft Office 2007 so the borders you select actually print out. Please be detailed as possible as 2007 is new to me.
use openoffice.org for far superior security, stability, and peace of mind. never use any microsoft products unless absolutely necessary.
Page Layout > Margins
I was frustrated with that (and many other things as well. I do not have it up but IIRC I used Alt F (for File) and found it that way.
I REALLY do not like how that took away my ability to have the commands that I want at one click -- I have 85 such commands in 2003 (plus the F keys, especially in Excel) and that list of 85 removes about 20 standard features on the main toolbars that are almost never used and I have removed.
For instance, in Word, I have a dozen commands on the top bar to the right of the File Edit View... buttons containing such things as superscripts and subscripts, inserting symbols, footnotes, changing font sizes, keeping lines and a paragraph together, .... In Excel, I have 25 commands there that I use all the time, including tracing precedents etc and adding/subtracting rows/columns/cells.
OK I've set the margins to every one of the suggestions and continually it informs me that section 1 of the border is outside the printable area no matter what I seem to do. I can't figure out how to move it over. On 2003, their was a function in which you could customarily realign the entire page. Who the F created 2007?
Did you try:
Page Layout > Margins > Custom Margins
no....see some people are too stupid to think logically....like clicking on seemingly applicable buttons in menus
Frank_in_the_8 wrote:
Did you try:
Page Layout > Margins > Custom Margins
26mi235 wrote:
I was frustrated with that (and many other things as well. I do not have it up but IIRC I used Alt F (for File) and found it that way.
I REALLY do not like how that took away my ability to have the commands that I want at one click -- I have 85 such commands in 2003 (plus the F keys, especially in Excel) and that list of 85 removes about 20 standard features on the main toolbars that are almost never used and I have removed.
For instance, in Word, I have a dozen commands on the top bar to the right of the File Edit View... buttons containing such things as superscripts and subscripts, inserting symbols, footnotes, changing font sizes, keeping lines and a paragraph together, .... In Excel, I have 25 commands there that I use all the time, including tracing precedents etc and adding/subtracting rows/columns/cells.
I hate change also.
There are a few things that I liked -- I liked that you could use the same commands as the old word (such as -- Alt-i-x for "insert text box"). I like that double clicking on an object can bring up the relevant menu -- cropping pictures is a lot easier now. Actually doing almost anything to pictures is easier now. The 3D options in powerpoint are great. But a lot of the defaults are weird -- why should the default line color in powerpoint be a light blue that you can barely see? Why is the default font Calibri instead of Times New Roman? The color schemes can also be strange, but the way they're set up can be very convenient. For example, I like in Excel how you automatically have four colors that you can change the boxes to to signify different things.
So the fact that we need to buy a new product to keep up is annoying, but I think they've actually made a lot of improvements.
Also, don't even get me started about OpenOffice. If it weren't for Microsoft, OpenOffice wouldn't exist in the first place. Microsoft makes us pay for their products, but it's because they spend a lot of time designing things to make them useful.