Welcome toWord.Tips.Net
Ask a Word Question
Make a Comment
Learn Access Now
Free Printable Forms
Beauty Tips
Car Tips
Cleaning Tips
College Tips
Cooking Tips
Excel2007 Tips
ExcelTips
Family Tips
Gardening Tips
Health Tips
Home Tips
Legal Tips
Money Tips
Organizing Tips
Pest Tips
Pet Tips
Wedding Tips
Word2007 Tips
WordTips
Collapsing and Expanding Subdocuments
Suppose you want to apply a particular formatting attribute to all the headings in your document in one fell swoop. If you use four heading levels in your document, and you want to make them all red, you could use find and replace to search for all the heading levels, in turn, and change them to red. This gets tedious, of course. You could speed up the process by using a macro, but the macro would still be quite long since you would still need to do four separate find and replace operations.
There is a quicker way, however: Do your work in Outline view. When you show only certain heading levels in Outline view, find and replace only operates on those particular heading levels. Follow these steps:
The result of this procedure is that all the headings in the document are changed to red text. This works because find and replace only works with whatever is visible when you are working in Outline view. If you didn't use find and replace, but instead selected the whole document (Ctrl+A) and changed the font to red, Word would make the changes in everything you see and everything that is hidden. Using find and replace, instead, results in only the visible text being modified.
Tip #48 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 2000 2002 2003 2007
More Power! For some people, the prospect of creating Word macros can be scary. WordTips: The Macros can help you conquer your fears and you'll discover you're much more confident and productive as you make Word do exactly what you want. This is an invaluable source for learning macros. You are introduced to the topic in bite-sized chunks, pulled from past issues of WordTips. Learn at your own pace, exactly the way you want.