Word processing is the ability to create text and format it
so it appears good looking, using different fonts, fancy characters, formatted
paragraphs, and possibly other features not found on classic text editors.
Microsoft Word is a computer
To use Microsoft Word, you must first open it. To do this,
you would click Start -> (All) Programs -> Microsoft Word.
Microsoft Word 2000 is a member of the Microsoft
A Microsoft Word file is called a document or a text document. Microsoft Word is a Multiple Document Interface (MDI). This means more than one document can be opened at a time and a user can work from many document alternatively. The first document created when the application starts, by default, is named Document1. If many documents are created while the program is running, they can be accessed from the main menu under Window. If the files are not being saved, subsequently created documents will be called Document2, Document3, and so on.
By default, when Microsoft Word 2000 starts, it
displays a menu on top and two adjacent toolbars. In earlier versions,
the application used to display the same toolbars but one on top of the
other. These are the Standard and the Formatting toolbars.
Before digging into the intricacies of text manipulation in Microsoft Word, we will first analyze and review its interface.
Since you have probably used
On of the first differences between WordPad and
Microsoft Word is the extended menu and toolbars of the latter. But the
biggest difference is that WordPad is a Single Document Interface, which
means only one document at a time can be opened. In Microsoft Word, you
can alternate through various documents, cutting, copying and pasting
from one to another with a single instance of the running application.
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Help
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General Help
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Getting help is the ability to look for guidance or
assistance with performing a task. Even the most skillful Microsoft Word
users get stuck sometimes. Therefore, there is no shame with looking for
help and only the most arrogant would pretend to know everything. Help is
provided at different levels: from Microsoft Word, from the Microsoft web
site, from friends and colleagues, from a teacher or a boss, etc.
The primary means of getting help in Microsoft Word is
through the main menu. In this case, you can click Help -> Microsoft
Word Help or press F1. This would display a window called Microsoft Word
Help:
This
HTML Help window is divided in two sections. The right frame displays the
result of what is selected in the left section.
The
left part displays categories of help. For detailed and titled sections,
you can access the Contents property page and expand a section. To expand,
you can either double-click a header or click its + button. Some headers
are inside of others. Under each header, there are web pages. To see the
contents of a web page, you can click it. This would display the page in
the right frame.
The Answer Wizard page allows you to
type a question or a word and do a search. To use it, first click the What
Would You Like To Do text box and type:
After
typing your question of a word, you can click Search. The Select Topic To
Display list box would then display the matches that the application was
able to find. If you find one that is suitable, you can click it and its
page would display in the right frame.
The Index
property page displays a list of symbols, characters, and words that would
need an explanation:
To
use it, you can click the Type Keywords text box and start typing,
Microsoft Word Help would look for the next match to what you are typing
and display the result.
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Context-Sensitive Help
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Context-sensitive help refers to help provided on a
specific item on the screen. Such help is provided for objects that are
part of the Microsoft Word interface. It includes buttons on toolbars or
sections of the status bar, dialog boxes etc. Context-sensitive help is also referred to as “What’s This?”.
To get context-sensitive help, press Shift + F1. In
addition to the traditional arrow, the mouse cursor would be accompanied
by a question mark. To get help on an object, you can just click it.
Another type of context sensitive help is provided in
various dialog boxes. They display a button with a question mark on the
left of the system Close button. To use this type of help, click the
question mark button and click the item on which you need help.
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The Office Assistant
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The Office Assistant is a “character” or a
“virtual person” whose main job is to provide instant help when using
a Microsoft Office product. To use its service, just click it, then type a word, a
sentence, or a question. After pressing Enter, a primary list of possible
matches would be displayed. If you do not find what is close to your
request, you can use the available options or change your request.
If you don't want the Office Assistant on the screen
while you are working, you can hide it. To do this, in Microsoft Word 2000, on the main
menu, you can click Help -> Hide Office Assistant. To display it when
it is not available, on the main menu, you can click Help -> Show the
Office Assistant.
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Online Help
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Online help is a separate program that provides help
on Microsoft Word. There are two main types of online help. If you have
access to a Microsoft Developer Network (MSDN) CD-ROM or DVD, which is the
help system provided to programmers who use Microsoft technologies (such
as Microsoft Visual Studio), it includes a section on Microsoft Office,
which internally includes a sub-category on Microsoft Word. On that help
system and in the left frame, you can expand the link that displays
Office.
Although help on the Internet tends to be disparate,
it is still the widest form of help available. This is provided in web
sites, web pages, newsgroups, support groups, etc. As the publisher of the
word processor, it is only natural to refer to the Microsoft
corporate web site first for help. The Microsoft web site is divided in
categories. A web site is dedicated to Microsoft Word at http://www.microsoft.com/word. You can get help at
http://support.microsoft.com.
Probably the most visited site of Microsoft for developers of all
Microsoft products is http://msdn.microsoft.com. This last site provides a
tree-based list that presents items in categories.
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Microsoft Word Exit
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Since Microsoft Word shares the same functionality with other applications, you can
close it easily.
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MOUS Topics
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