Hello! We’re happy to announce that Microsoft Office Professional 2010 Step by Step, by Joyce Cox, Joan Lambert, and Curtis Frye, is now available. See this post for the book’s Table of contents and other information.
This 1072-page book provides instructional material for the following programs, which together form the Office Professional 2010 software suite:
● Microsoft Word 2010 A word-processing program with which you can quickly and efficiently author and format documents. ● Microsoft Excel 2010 A spreadsheet program with which you can analyze, communicate, and manage information. ● Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 A program with which you can develop and present dynamic, professional-looking slide presentations. ● Microsoft OneNote 2010 A digital notebook program with which you can collect, organize, and quickly locate many types of electronic information. ● Microsoft Outlook 2010 A personal information management program with which you can manage e-mail, contacts, meetings, tasks, and other communications. ● Microsoft Access 2010 A database program with which you can collect information and output information for reuse in a variety of formats. ● Microsoft Publisher 2010 A desktop publishing program with which you can lay out newsletters, cards, calendars, and other publications.
And here’s an excerpt from the book for your reading pleasure:
Chapter 5 Organize Information in Columns and Tables
In this chapter, you will learn how to ✔ Present information in columns. ✔ Create tabbed lists. ✔ Present information in tables. ✔ Format tables.
Information in documents is most commonly presented as paragraphs of text. To make a text-heavy document more legible, you can flow the text in two or more columns, or you can display information in a table. For example, flowing text in multiple columns is a common practice in newsletters, flyers, and brochures; and presenting information in tables is common in reports.
When you need to present data in a document, using a table is often more efficient than describing the data in a paragraph, particularly when the data consists of numeric values. Tables make the data easier to read and understand. A small amount of data can be displayed in simple columns separated by tabs, which creates a tabbed list. A larger amount of data, or more complex data, is better presented in a table, which is a structure of rows and columns, frequently with row and column headings.
In this chapter, you’ll first create and modify columns of text. Then you’ll create a simple tabbed list. Finally, you’ll create tables from scratch and from existing text, and format a table in various ways.
Practice Files Before you can complete the exercises in this chapter, you need to copy the book’s practice files to your computer. The practice files you’ll use to complete the exercises in this chapter are in the Chapter05 practice file folder. A complete list of practice files is provided in “Using the Practice Files” at the beginning of this book.
Presenting Information in Columns
By default, Microsoft Word 2010 displays text in one column that spans the width of the page between the left and right margins. You can specify that text be displayed in two, three, or more columns to create layouts like those used in newspapers and magazines. When you format text to flow in columns, the text fills the first column on each page and then moves to the top of the next column. You can manually indicate where you want the text within each column to end.
The Columns gallery in the Page Setup group on the Page Layout tab displays several standard options for dividing text into columns. You can choose one, two, or three columns of equal width or two columns of unequal width. If the standard options don’t suit your needs, you can specify the number and width of columns. The number of columns is limited by the width and margins of the page, and each column must be at least a half inch wide.
The Columns gallery displays the predefined column options.
No matter how you set up the columns initially, you can change the layout or column widths at any time.
You can format an entire document or a section of a document in columns. When you select a section of text and format it as columns, Word inserts section breaks at the beginning and end of the selected text to delineate the area in which the columnar formatting is applied. Within the columnar text, you can insert column breaks to specify where you want to end one column and start another. Section and column breaks are visible when you display formatting marks in the document.
Tip You can apply many types of formatting, including page orientation, to content within a specific section of a document without affecting the surrounding text. For information about sections, see “Controlling What Appears on Each Page” in Chapter 7, “Preview, Print, and Distribute Documents.”
You can apply character and paragraph formatting to columnar text in the same way you would any text. Here are some formatting tips for columnar text:
In this exercise, you’ll flow the text in one section of a document into three columns. You’ll justify the text in the columns, change the column spacing, and hyphenate the text. You’ll then break a column at a specific location instead of allowing the text to flow naturally from one column to the next.
SET UP You need the RoomPlanner_start document located in your Chapter05 practice file folder to complete this exercise. Open the RoomPlanner_start document, and save it as RoomPlanner. Then display formatting marks and the rulers, and follow the steps.
1. Click at the beginning of the paragraph that begins Take a look (do not click in the selection area). Then scroll down until you can see the end of the document, hold down the Shift key, and click to the right of the paragraph mark after credit cards.
Word selects the text from the Take a look paragraph through the end of the last paragraph (but not the empty paragraph).
Tip If you want to format an entire document with the same number of columns, you can simply click anywhere in the document—you don’t have to select the text.
2. On the Page Layout tab, in the Page Setup group, click the Columns button, and then in the Columns gallery, click Three.
Word inserts a section break above the selected text and flows the text within the section into three columns.
3. Press Ctrl+Home to move to the top of the document.
The section break is visible above the columns.
A continuous section break changes the formatting of the subsequent text but keeps it on the same page.
4. On the Home tab, in the Editing group, click the Select button, and then click Select All.
Keyboard Shortcut Press Ctrl+A to select all the text in the document.
5. In the Paragraph group, click the Justify button.
Keyboard Shortcut Press Ctrl+J to justify paragraphs.
The spacing between the words changes to align all the paragraphs in the document with both the left and right margins. Because you applied the formatting to the entire document, the title is no longer centered. However, it is often quicker to apply formatting globally and then deal with the exceptions.
6. Press Ctrl+Home to move to the paragraph containing the document title. Then in the Paragraph group, click the Center button.
Keyboard Shortcut Press Ctrl+E to center text.
Word centers the document title between the left and right margins.
7. Adjust the zoom percentage until you can see about two-thirds of the first page of the document.
See Also For information about adjusting the zoom percentage, see “Viewing Files in Different Ways” in Chapter 2, “Work with Files.”
8. Click anywhere in the first column.
On the horizontal ruler, Word indicates the margins of the columns.
On the ruler, the indent markers show the indentation of the active column.
Tip If your rulers aren’t turned on, select the Ruler check box in the Show group of the View tab.
9. On the Page Layout tab, display the Columns gallery, and click More Columns.
The Columns dialog box opens. The spacing between columns is set by default to a half inch.
Because the Equal Column Width check box is selected, you can adjust the width and spacing of only the first column.
Tip To separate the columns with vertical lines, select the Line Between check box.
10. In the Width and spacing area, in the Spacing box for column 1, type or select 0.2".
Word changes the measurement in the Spacing box for column 2, and widens all the columns in the Preview area to reflect the new setting.
11. Click OK.
Word reflows the columns to fit their new margins.
Wider columns generally look neater on the page.
12. Click at the beginning of the Take a look paragraph. Then in the Page Setup group, click the Hyphenation button, and click Automatic.
Word hyphenates the text of the document, which fills in some of the large gaps between words.
13. Click anywhere in the NOTE paragraph in the third column.
14. On the horizontal ruler, at the left end of the third column, drag the Hanging Indent marker 0.25 inch (two marks) to the right.
All the lines in the NOTE paragraph except the first are now indented, offsetting the note from the paragraphs above and below it.
You can change the indentation of individual paragraphs within a column.
15. Display the bottom of page 1. In the first column on page 1, click at the beginning of the Take your Room Planner home paragraph. Then in the Page Setup group, click the Breaks button, and click Column.
Word inserts a column break. The text that follows the column break moves to the top of the second column.
16. At the bottom of the third column on page 1, click at the beginning of the If you’re not sure paragraph, and then on the Quick Access Toolbar, click the Repeat Insertion button to insert another column break.
Keyboard Shortcut Press Ctrl+Y to repeat the previous action.
Word inserts a column break. The text that follows the column break moves to the top of the first column on page 2.
CLEAN UP Return the Zoom Level setting to 100%, and then save and close the RoomPlanner document.