I'm afraid I still have no idea what might be generating the message you included in your original post, though.ĪI: Artificial Intelligence or Automated Idiocy? Please mark Yes/No as to whether a Reply answers your question. The Styles Palette Jim pointed you to is one of its components. Word 2003 and earlier ship with a number of built-in toolbars. The techniques described below are not available in Ribbon versions (Word 2007 and above) for those versions, see my article on Customizing the Quick Access Toolbar. This article is for Word 2003 and earlier. There is a button similar in appearance to the old Formatting Palette button (in roughly the same location) on the How to add a command or macro to a toolbar. Styles can also be applied from the Styles list on theįormat> Styles dialog, just as they have been in several previous versions. Styles group which includes the Quick Styles Gallery. Hover over the image to find clickable areas which jump to the Help section for those. To display, right-click within the text area of the In-Place Text Editor, and click Editor Settings > Show Toolbar. The toolbar is part of the In-Place Text Editor when working with multiline text. Instead, formatting features have been incorporated into the Controls the text style for a multiline text object and character and paragraph formatting for selected text. On the off chance that you may be referring to Word 2004, the button you're describing no longer exists, nor does theįormatting Palette. If so, it would be very helpful if you'd state what that version is. ![]() ![]() Hopefully Jim's guess is on target but I get the impression that you're trying to relate the features of Word 2011 to features you're accustomed to in some prior version.
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