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Spell Checking with Text Boxes

Summary: Text boxes are a common design element in a document. You may wonder if the text you place in a text box can be spell checked. The answer is definitely positive, as discussed in this tip. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, Word 2003, and Word 2007.)

Laney asked if there was a way to spell-check text within text boxes. She uses text boxes extensively for her layout design, and Word seems to ignore the text in the text boxes when it comes time to spell check.

In testing this problem, we actually found out that the text in text boxes is spell-checked; it is not ignored. Let's say that you have a five-page document, with text boxes on pages one and two. If you start doing a spell-check at the beginning of your document, Word goes through all five pages of the text before it actually does the spell-check on the text boxes. Why? Because text boxes are not on the same "layer" as the rest of the document. The spell-checker finishes everything on the text layer before it starts checking things on the other layers of the document.

If this wait-until-last approach to spell-checking bothers you, then you may want to use a different design element rather than text boxes. For instance, you could use tables instead of text boxes; they are placed on the text layer and processed with the rest of the text by the spell-checker. Another approach is to convert the text boxes to frames (as described in other issues of WordTips). Frames are placed on the same layer as the text, as well. When the anchor point for the frame is encountered by the spell-checker, all of the text in the frame is spell-checked. When the frame's text is finished, then the spell-checker picks right back up, at the point in the main text immediately following the frame's anchor.

If you still cannot get the spell-checker to pay attention to the text in your text boxes, the problem may not be related to the use of text boxes. Instead, the text itself could be marked to be ignored by the spell checker. To see if this is the case, select the text in the text box, then display the Language dialog box. (In Word 2007 display the Review tab of the ribbon and click Set Language in the Proofing group. In older versions of Word choose Tools | Language | Set Language.) If the check box entitled "Do Not Check Spelling or Grammar" is selected, then you have discovered your problem. Clear the check box, close the dialog box, and do your spelling check again.

Tip #204 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003 | 2007

Create Rock-Solid Lists! Bulleted and numbered lists can help make your writing clearer and easier to follow. If not done properly, however, they can be a nightmare to work with. Discover the ins and outs of Word's lists with this great reference available in two versions.
 
Check out Word Bullets and Numbering today!