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Setting Fraction Bar Overhang Spacing in the Equation Editor
Printing On Both Sides of the Paper
Turning Off AutoComplete for Dates
Understanding Auto Line Spacing
Adding Comments to Your Document
Conditional Calculations in Word
Word provides a huge variety of labels with which it works quite well. When doing a mail-merge, you can have your data automatically formatted to print on any of the labels that Word supports. When doing the merge, Word fills the labels from left to right and top to bottom. For example, if you are printing on labels that are three across, then Word places data in the three labels in the first row before moving to the second.
What if you want the order in which labels are filled to be different, however? For instance, what if you want the first column of labels filled out (top to bottom) before Word proceeds to the second column? There is no setting or feature in Word that allows you to specify a "fill order" for labels in a mail merge. There are a couple of ways to handle this situation, however.
First of all, you could start with your data source and simply reorder the information in the data source. If your data source is a Word table or an Excel workbook, this is fairly easy. If you are using Access as a data source, or if the number of records in your data source is very large, then pursuing this workaround can be impractical, tedious, or impossible.
Another potential solution is to manually rebuild the document into which you are merging the labels. When you choose to have Word create the merge document, and you tell Word that you are printing to labels, then Word creates a table that represents the appearance of the labels on the printed page. This table is then filled out using the information from the data source. If you are skilled a document formatting and table creation, you can change the merge document. Instead of relying on the table that Word sets up, you can set up your own table in a multi-column document.
For instance, let's say that you want to print on standard three-across address labels. Normally Word creates a table that is three columns wide by ten rows deep. You could do essentially the same thing by using the Columns option from the Format menu to create three columns on your page. (These aren't table columns remember, but page columns.) Then, create a table that is one column wide and thirty rows deep. The table will wrap within the page columns, and should remain on a single page. If you adjust the table cells to the proper size and set the page columns to the proper width, your labels will be merged and printed from top to bottom and left to right, just as desired.
An easier way to accomplish this solution (rather than starting with a document from scratch) is to follow these general steps:
By following these steps, the only thing you should need to do is adjust the spacing between columns to get your labels to print at the proper horizontal interval on the page.
Tip #1534 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 2000 2002 2003
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