Word Processing White Papers
Microsoft Office System Webcast: Tips and Tricks for Impressive Word 2007 Documents in Less Time (Level 200)
Overview Microsoft Office Word 2007 offers powerful new formatting tools, impressive graphics, and beautiful new effects, but when are users supposed to find time to learn so many new or changed features? Fortunately, one of the best things about the cool, new formatting capabilities in Office Word 2007 is how simple they can be to use. The attendee of this webcast will learn tips and tricks for working with styles, tables, graphics, and more-all from a hands-on document expert. The presenter explains how it has never been easier to create beautiful, manageable, and impressive documents every time.
| Publisher | Microsoft | File Format | Webcast |
|---|---|---|---|
| Date Published | April 2007 | ||
| Format | Webcasts | ||
| Topics | |||
Let Word Manage Your Table of Contents: Heading Levels Make TOCs Easy
A table of contents helps those who read the document by presenting the information in handy outline form. Preparing a table of contents used to be a laborious manual process...
Let Word Create Your Table of Contents Applies To: Microsoft Office Word 2003
Word provides a quick way to create a table of contents, using built-in heading styles. Once the heading levels are identified in the document, Word can use them to create...
Create a Set of Labels With Mail Merge: Create Labels
Mail merge is used to create a set of documents, such as a form letter that is sent to many customers or a sheet of address labels. This webcast shows...
Word 2007: Setting Up the Document: Margins, Page Breaks, and More
Document makes a first impression before anyone reads a word. The paper size, color, and borders give the reader an overall sense of the document's theme and quality. Margins, the...
PDF Hacks: Split and Merge PDF Documents (Even Without Acrobat)
As a document proceeds through its lifecycle, it can undergo many changes. It might be assembled from individual sections and then compiled into a larger report. Individual pages might be...



