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
Many users, especially when they are entering text (as opposed to subsequent editing and formatting), prefer to accomplish as many tasks as possible from the keyboard. Word provides a generous supply of built-in keyboard shortcuts (these are described in the on-line Help, and in various past issues of WordTips) and also allows users to create their own shortcuts by displaying the Customize dialog box and choosing Keyboard.
Shortcut keys can be assigned to commands, macros, styles, and font characters. The keys can be any combination of ALT, CTRL, SHIFT, and any character that can be entered from the keyboard, including a space. You can even duplicate the way Word uses prefix keys for some international characters.
Users are often advised to use ALT as part of a shortcut key because it is less used by Word's built-in shortcuts. This certainly applies to ALT+CTRL and ALT+SHIFT combinations. But users should be very wary of using ALT alone. The reason is that all top-level menu items are accessed from the keyboard with the ALT key. For example, ALT+I accesses the Insert menu. If you assign (as a user I recently worked with had done) ALT+I as a shortcut key, Word does not warn you that ALT+I is reserved for a menu item. In fact, the dialog box describes ALT+I as 'unassigned.' This is true of all other menu commands, as well.
You can change the hotkey for menu items in the Customize dialog by changing the name. For example, if you change "&Insert" to "Ins&ert," the hotkey becomes ALT+E, and Word does not warn you that this combination is already assigned to Edit. The net result is that it does not work properly for either one. There are also other built-in menus that can be added to the menu bar that equally conflict with the existing menu commands--again, totally without warning.
Some people regard this shortcoming as a bug in Word, but it appears to have been done by design. (Why? Who knows!) Users should be aware of the potential problem, and be alert to possible conflicts when creating their own keyboard and menu shortcuts.
Tip #640 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 6 95 97 2000 2002 2003
Find and Replace Almost Anything! An invaluable resource for learning how to harness the full power of Word's search and replace capabilities. You'll discover everything you need in order to master all the intricacies of finding and replacing elements of your document, including the super-powerful "wildcard searches" available in Word.