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Standardizing Note Reference Placement
Selecting Printing of Color Pictures
Moving Rows and Columns With the Mouse
When you write a macro, you need to test it and correct any errors in the macro. This process is called debugging. The process of debugging a macro in WordBasic is the same as debugging in any other programming language. All you need to do is step through the macro, one command at a time, and make sure it works as you think it should. You do this by viewing both the windows for your macro and a test document. As you step through the macro (using the controls in the WordBasic toolbar), you can correct any errors you locate.
As you are debugging macros, you need to make sure you think through every possible way the macro could be used and all the possible conditions that could exist at the time the macro is invoked. Try the macro out in all these ways and under all these conditions. In this way, you will make your macro much more useful.
Tip #750 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 6 95
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.