This is a massive thing for me because I've been hugely frustrated that Outlook (I'm using 2003) doesn't have a macro-recording facility. Again, if anyone fancies having a walk-through, just shout. Every regular user of Excel that I've help create these icons also loves them. These I also find HUGELY useful - and have long used them. One pastes only the formatting of the copied cell(s) the other pastes in only the value of a copied cell(s). No less important to me, I have also set up two formatting toolbar icons in Excel 2003. For those who can't wait, the clue is that you record a macro, drag it to the toolbar and then change its icon to something that might help you to remember what it does. If anyone wants a quick walk-through of how to set up such an icon, just shout and I'll knock up something and paste it here. I don't need it for the correction of text that's just been pasted into Word cos (in Word 2003, which is what I'm using here), I have set up a toolbar icon to paste in unformatted text - and use that VERY many times a week. The first tip - using Ctrl+Spacebar to make highlighted text revert to the bodytext format - is VERY interesting to me (as I'll explain in a bit) but not for use in Word. It's making my life a whole lot easier already!įirst off, thanks HUGELY to Parm for creating the article and associated thread. If you only need to paste unformatted text from time to time, hitting Alt, H, V, S, Up Arrow, Enter will do just the trick. Here you'll be able set Word to paste as text only from a variety of sources. In Microsoft Word 2007, navigate to Word Options (via the Office Orb), choose the Advanced tab and scroll down to Cut, Copy and Paste.
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December 2022
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