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Changing How Changes are Noted in Word

Summary: Do you want to modify how Word marks changes in your document? It's easy to do, depending on your version of Word. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, Word 2003, and Word 2007.)

If you use the Track Changes feature of Word, you know how your document looks as you make changes. Added text is shown in some different color, and deleted text is shown with a strikethrough or in balloons to the side of your text. You may want to change how Word shows your changed text. Fortunately, Word allows you great flexibility in this area. To make your configuration changes, follow these steps if you are using a version of Word prior to Word 2007:

  1. Choose Options from the Tools menu. Word displays the Options dialog box.
  2. Select the Track Changes tab. (Click here to see a related figure.)
  3. Using the controls in the dialog box, indicate how you want your changes to appear when you have Track Changes turned on.
  4. Click on OK.

In Word 97 and Word 2000, the Track Changes tab allows you to specify four different ways in which changes can be tracked:

  • Inserted Text. Any text you add in a document is normally shown in a different color, and with an underline. You can cause Word to display the text using bold, italic, or a double underline, if you rather.
  • Deleted Text. Normally deleted text is shown with a line through it. You can, instead, cause Word to use hidden text to mark deleted text. You can also cause deleted text to be marked with a carat or a hash mark.
  • Changed Formatting. Typically Word doesn't call attention to any formatting changes in your text. If you want to keep track of this, then change the settings to show how you want note the changes. Word can denote these changes using bold, italic, underlined, or double-underlined text. (The concept of using formatting to indicate formatting changes seems rather circular, doesn't it?)
  • Changed Lines. This setting is used to specify how any lines that contain changes should be noted. Normally, Word adds a vertical bar to the outside border of the line.

In Word 2002 and Word 2003 the options available on the Track Changes tab are a bit different:

  • Track Changes Options. Here you specify how you want text insertions to appear in your document. They normally appear as underlined text in a different color, but you can instruct Word to use different types of formatting for the text you add to the document.
  • Balloons. The controls in this area allow you to specify if Word should use change balloons in your document. These balloons appear at the right side of a document and indicate, precisely, the changes made at different points in the document.
  • Printing. Here you specify how you want Word to print your document when there are change balloons present. You can choose Auto, which allows Word to decide whether to print in portrait or landscape mode; you can chose Preserve, which forces Word to keep the same orientation you specified for your document; and you can choose Force Landscape which forces Word to use landscape orientation whenever there are any change balloons.
  • Changed Lines. This setting is used to specify how any lines that contain changes should be noted. Normally, Word adds a vertical bar to the outside border of the line.

In Word 2007 you can change how changes are noted by following these steps:

  1. Make sure the Review tab of the ribbon is displayed.
  2. Within the Tracking group, click the down arrow under the Track Changes tool.
  3. In the resulting submenu, click Change Tracking Options. Word displays the Track Changes Options dialog box. (Click here to see a related figure.)

Word 2007 allows you to change a wide variety of options relative to how changes are tracked. These are the major sections of the dialog box:

  • Markup. Use these options to specify how text insertions, deletions, and other edits should appear. You can also specify how comments should be noted.
  • Moves. This section allows you to specify how moved items should be marked within a document. (This option, new to Word 2007, is unavailable when working on a document saved in an older Word format.)
  • Table Cell Highlighting. When you make changes to the structure of tables, these settings are used to mark the changes.
  • Formatting. Here's where you can specify how you want to format text whose formatting has been changed. (Again, this seems rather circular to me.)
  • Balloons. Some editing changes (particularly deletions) are noted using balloons. The settings in this section allow you to specify how those balloons should appear in the document.

Tip #40 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003 | 2007

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