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Selecting a Graphic Behind a Text Box

Summary: How to select a graphic that is obscured by a text box can be perplexing. Here's an overview of the different ways you can select just the graphic and nothing else. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, Word 2003, and Word 2007.)

You can overlay graphics and text boxes in a document. This can lead to problems in easily selecting objects, however. For instance, if you place a graphic in your document and then place a text box over the top of it, the graphic is essentially "hidden" by the text box, even if you can see the graphic through the text box. You then cannot directly click on the graphic to select it.

There are several things you can do to select the "hidden" graphic. The answers depend, in part, on how the graphic was inserted in your document.

The first way to select the graphic is to simply select the text box and send it behind the graphic. Right-click the text box, then choose Order, and Send to Back. (If the graphic is inline with the text, you will need to choose Send Behind Text.) You can then click on the graphic to select it. When you are done, again right-click on the text box, choose Order, and Bring to Front (or Bring In Front of Text).

If the graphic is floating over the text, not inline, and it is markedly smaller than the text box that obscures it, you can click the Select Objects arrow on the Drawing toolbar and draw a selection box that encompasses the graphic but not the text box. (In Word 2007 you can activate the Select Objects arrow by displaying the Home tab of the ribbon, clicking Select in the Editing group, and then choosing Select Objects.) Once the arrow is active, click the mouse somewhere outside the bounds of the text box. Hold down the mouse button as you drag to "surround" the graphic, but without surrounding the text box. When you let go of the mouse button, the graphic should be selected.

Another way to select the obscured graphic (if it is floating over the text) is to use the Tab or Ctrl+Tab keys. If you have an object selected—such as the text box—and you press either of these keys, then the next object in the document is selected. If the text box and the graphic are the only objects, then the keys cycle between the two.

You should note that the Tab or Ctrl+Tab method will only work if you start with the text box selected. If the insertion point is visible in the text box, then the text box itself is not selected. To select the text box, you need to click the border of the text box, and the insertion point disappears. If you press Tab or Ctrl+Tab while the insertion point is visible in the text box, then you only modify the text in the text box; you don't select the next object.

Tip #3806 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003 | 2007

Create Rock-Solid Lists! Bulleted and numbered lists can help make your writing clearer and easier to follow. If not done properly, however, they can be a nightmare to work with. Discover the ins and outs of Word's lists with this great reference available in two versions.
 
Check out Word Bullets and Numbering today!