Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,487,175 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Expand the use of format painter in word.


Q. Format Painter is a very handy tool for copying a format style from one place to another, but it seems to work with only one section at a time. Is there a way to get it to work like a rubber stamp in as many different places as I wish?

A. Yes, there is, but before I show you, I want readers to understand how to use Format Painter, which is in your Word and Excel A full-featured spreadsheet for Windows and the Macintosh from Microsoft. It can link many spreadsheets for consolidation and provides a wide variety of business graphics and charts for creating presentation materials.  toolbar A row or column of on-screen buttons used to activate functions in the application. Many toolbars are customizable, letting you add and delete buttons as required. Toolbars may be fixed in position or may float, which means they can be dragged to a more convenient location in the  and looks like a paintbrush (graphics, tool) Paintbrush - A Microsoft Windows tool for creating bitmap graphics. .

Let's say you have a word (or a sentence or paragraph or spreadsheet spreadsheet

Computer software that allows the user to enter columns and rows of numbers in a ledgerlike format. Any cell of the ledger may contain either data or a formula that describes the value that should be inserted therein based on the values in other cells.
 cell) whose format you'd like to replicate rep·li·cate
v.
1. To duplicate, copy, reproduce, or repeat.

2. To reproduce or make an exact copy or copies of genetic material, a cell, or an organism.

n.
A repetition of an experiment or a procedure.
 in another part of your document or worksheet. Begin by highlighting the source word (or whatever it is) and then click on Format Painter. As you move your cursor (1) The symbol used to point to some element on screen. On Windows, Mac and other graphics-based screens, it is also called a "pointer," and it changes shape as it is moved with the mouse into different areas of the application. , it instantly will change to a small paintbrush. Wipe it across the words or cells to which you want the new formatting to apply and click again. That's it: The target text or cell will have the new formatting.

Now to answer your question--how can you use the Format Painter on multiple sections of your document or spreadsheet without going back each time to copy the format source? After you highlight the formatted characters you want to copy, double-click on the Format Painter and paint the formatting style anywhere you want. The cursor-turned-paintbrush will remain as long as you wish. To turn it off, press Esc or click again on the Format Painter icon.

If Format Painter is not in your toolbar, click on Tools, Customize, the Commands tab and then Format. Cursor down the list and when you find the paintbrush icon just drag it up to your toolbar.
COPYRIGHT 2004 American Institute of CPA's
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Technology Q&A
Author:Zarowin, Stanley
Publication:Journal of Accountancy
Date:Nov 1, 2004
Words:282
Previous Article:Move (or copy) a batch of Excel worksheets.(Technology Q&A)
Next Article:Save your favorites when switching browrser.(Technology Q&A)



Related Articles
Arthur Dove. (art exhibit at Whitney Museum of American Art, Andover, Massachusetts)
Poetry in motion: CD-ROM.
Technology Q&A.
Technology Q&A.
Talk about dance. (News).(creating dance archives)(Brief Article)
Qualcomm Eudora 6.0.
Shortcuts.(Technology Q&A)
Technology Q&A: command word to repair itself ... create an Excel contents tab ... shade alternating rows or columns ... a better idea ... the right...
Creating Black Americans: African American History and Its Meanings, 1619 to the Present.(Brief Article)(Book Review)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles