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Setting Fraction Bar Overhang Spacing in the Equation Editor

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Printing without Headings

Summary: Want some quick and handy ways to not print certain information in your documents, such as headings? This tip outlines a couple of things you can do to banish the unwanted text, at least from the printout. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, and Word 2003.)

Lyle uses Word to create essays by putting together an outline and then developing the body of the essay based on the outline. When he is finished with the essay, the outline is important to him, but he does not consider it a part of the essay. He is wondering how he can print the essay without the outline, which consists of the various headings in the document.

There are a couple of ways that you can print your essay without the headings. One way is to simply delete the headings on the copy you want to print. This is relatively easy for a short document with few headings, and only mildly more complicated if you have a longer document with many headings. (In which case you can use Find and Replace to delete the headings.) When through printing, simply close the document without saving, and your on-disk version (the last one you saved) still has the headings in place.

Another option is to format the headings so that they are white. White text printed on white paper means that they will be invisible on the printed page, but there will still be vertical space left in the document to indicate where the headings really are.

The best solution, by far, is to use the Hidden attribute for your headings. Just select the headings (or display the style definition for your headings) and choose Font from the Format menu. Word displays the Font dialog box, and you can select the Hidden check box. When you close the dialog box, the attribute is applied to the headings.

With the Hidden attribute set, there are two ways you can instruct Word to treat the text: You can control whether hidden text is displayed on-screen, and you can control whether it is printed. These settings are separate from each other, and in this case you probably want the headings to be visible on-screen, but invisible when printing. Follow these steps:

  1. Choose Options from the Tools menu. Word displays the Options dialog box.
  2. Display the View tab. (Click here to see a related figure.)
  3. Make sure that either the Hidden Text check box or the All check box is selected. Either of these settings will make sure the hidden text appears on-screen.
  4. Display the Print tab. (Click here to see a related figure.)
  5. Make sure the Hidden Text check box is cleared. This setting controls whether hidden text is printed or not.
  6. Click OK to close the Options dialog box.

Tip #295 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003

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