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Printing On Both Sides of the Paper

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Replacing with Plain Text

Summary: When you use Find and Replace, the formatting of what you are replacing has an effect on what it is being replaced with. This can create some undesired results, but there are ways around the problem, as described in this tip. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, and Word 2003.)

If you use Word's Find and Replace tool to search for text and replace it with other text, Word applies to the replacement text the character attributes it found in the first character of the Find What text. For example, if you search for "Hilight is a brief review," and the word "Highlight" is in italics in the document, then the entire replacement string is formatted as italics by Word.

This behavior is by design; Word needs to pick some sort of formatting for the replacement text, so it bases it on the first character of what is being replaced. In most cases this isn't a problem, but in some cases (such as when the replacement text needs to have several character attributes) it can be a problem.

One solution is to use the formatting capabilities of the Find and Replace tool. When setting up your search, make sure the insertion point is in the Replace With box and then use the Format drop-down list to choose what formatting you want applied to the replacement text. If you don't want it to have any formatting, then you can choose Format | Font and make sure that Regular Text is selected.

If your formatting needs are more complex than forcing a plain-text replacement, then this simplistic approach won't work. For instance, you might want to replace "Hilight is a brief review" with "Highlights is a magazine for children," and both "Hilight" and "Highlights" were the only text to appear in italics. In this case, you need to rely on a more esoteric feature of the Find and Replace tool.

  1. Find a place in your document where you can type the replacement text and format it the way you want.
  2. Select the text and press Ctrl+X. The text is cut from the document and placed in the Clipboard.
  3. Press Ctrl+H to display the Replace tab of the Find and Replace dialog box. (Click here to see a related figure.)
  4. In the Find What box, enter the text you want to replace.
  5. In the Replace With box, enter ^c.
  6. Click Replace All.

Word finds whatever text you specified in step 4 and replaces it with the contents of the Clipboard, which happens to be your formatted replacement text.

Tip #361 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003

Great Idea! Word is a tool to get what you really want—printed output. This means you need to make sure that Word works as well as possible with your printer, whether it is sitting on your desk or in a room down the hall.
 
Check out WordTips: Printing and Printers today!