Do you need to use a Euro symbol in an economics paper? How about a Celsius degree in a lab report? Or, maybe you need to insert special characters into your math homework. I recently discovered the Math AutoCorrect feature in Word and realized that I could use it for more than just math stuff.
Today’s blog post is brought to you by Gary Willoughby. Gary is a writer on Office.com who has created and edited content about Excel, Access, and Project.
You can add page numbers that show the chapter number and the page number, such as 1-1 or 1:1, or you can add a header that includes “Chapter n” and the page number. Let’s look at how to do each option.
This blog post is brought to you by Dan Battagin a Lead Program Manager on the Excel team. OK, so I’m going to talk a bit about a relatively unknown feature in Excel: XML data import.
Last week, we took a look at printing envelopes. But often people want to print labels–and then put the labels on envelopes, shipping boxes, CDs, file folders, jars of apricot jam, or whatever can be labeled.
This week’s post is written by Amy Miller. Amy is a writer for Office.com. For many of us, our kids are now back in school, and the reality of packed lunches, homework assignments, and hectic schedules are a new reality. If you’re a teacher, your life just got extra busy too.
I tell you, I learn new things—sometimes even elementary things, that even typing monkeys already know—about Office programs every day and today I’m offering the newest one. I’m going to make this short and sweet today.
Did you know that it’s easy to create a bibliography based on common citation formats in Microsoft Word? A few months ago, we were asking students about how they write a research paper.
If your document is just a little bit longer than one page, how can you shrink it to fit? We’ve seen customer questions asking where this feature is in Word 2010. Answer: It’s in the command well. And you can pluck it from there and add it to the ribbon.