Pages for Mac: View formatting symbols and layout in a Pages document View formatting symbols and layout in a Pages document You can show the formatting symbols that are added when you press the Space bar, tab or Return, and when you add breaks. Microsoft Track Changes — Word for Mac (2011) Step 1: Open your Microsoft Word document, and locate the Review tab. Step 2: Locate the Track Changes icon in the Tracking panel; be sure that the Track Changes is switched off. If Track Changes is switched on, as in the screen shot below, make sure you click on the ON icon to turn this feature off. If you continue with the Track Changes.
You can easily add all sorts of objects to a Word document in Office 2011 for Mac. Word 2011 gives you shortcuts to position an object in your document. Here’s how to get at them:
- Select an object.
- On the Ribbon’s Format tab, go to the Arrange group and click the Position button.
- Choose a position from the gallery.
When you put an object into a Word document and then add text or other content earlier in the document, your object moves down along with the text in the document. A word-processing document flows that way so that your objects stay in the same relative position to the text as you add or delete text and objects. You can change this behavior, though.
You can make an object stay in an exact position in the document so that text flows around the object, and it doesn’t move with the text — this is known as anchoring. Think of this as dropping a boat anchor — water flows by, but the boat stays in the same position relative to the shore. In Word, if you anchor an object to a margin, the object stays in the same relative position. Nonanchored objects and text flow around the object. This anchoring capability is a basis of publishing programs, so it’s natural to use it in Word’s Publishing Layout and Print Layout views. Follow these steps to anchor an object in Word:
- Select an object.
- On the Ribbon’s Format tab, go to the Arrange group and choose Position→More Layout Options.
- Click the Position tab.
- (Optional) Set the position of an object precisely using controls in this dialog.
- Under Options, select the Lock Anchor check box.
- Click OK to close the Advanced Layout dialog and then click OK to close the Advanced Layout dialog.
Text now flows according to the settings you made, and the object is anchored to the position you selected. Although you can still drag the object to new positions on the page, it won’t move when you add or delete text.
Active2 years, 1 month ago
In Microsoft Word for Mac 2011, I'm trying to edit the
Hyperlink
and FollowedHyperlink
styles so that they don't modify the text's color that I'm hyperlinking.Microsoft Word Hidden Text
For example, let's say I have the following words:
red blue green
all written in thier corresponding colors. Next, I decide to highlight these words and hyperlink them. By default, all the text will be turned into blue. That's not what I want; I want all the text to be the same colors, but with an underline added. That is, I would like the word red
to still appear in red color, not blue.When I edit the style, it shows this, as you would expect:
Underline, Font color: Hyperlink, Style: Hide until used, Priority: 100, Based on: Default Paragraph Font.
I want to remove the part I bolded, however, I don't see a way to do that. When I click the color icon, there is no option to select 'no color.' The closest thing to that is 'Auto' which just changes the links to be black instead of blue.
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7 Answers
Format > Styles
There you can modify the styles in use for the current document, including hyperlink colours.
Brenton StrachanBrenton Strachan
How to customize your hyperlink:
Home → Styles Pane → Followed Hyperlink → Modify Style → Formatting
Then simply choose the format that you would like :)
Menelaos KotsollarisMenelaos Kotsollaris
I believe if you go under general setting you can set the default formatting for them..Its not where you NORMALLY format the text.. (i don't have it installed right now.)go to file and preferences. ( i think )
Fuzz E NutzFuzz E Nutz
From the 'Home' tab, open the 'Styles' box.Select the 'Options..' link.In the 'Select styles to show:' dropdown menu, select 'All styles' and click OK.Go back to the Styles menu, select 'FollowedHyperlink'Select 'Modify..'In the Formatting section, choose the color you want and click OK
JohnJohn
For Mac, you can create a Macro to change the hyperlink color.
And then save it as a template with .docm. Then you can save it as a .docx.
motorbabymotorbaby
Found it!
- 'Home' tab
- 'Format' section
- Arrow to drop down
- Right-click on the 'followed hyperlink' box
- 'Modify'
- Choose the 'style property'
- 'Format'
- Change the colour
- Hit 'okay' on each open window
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AdamAdam
There does not seem to be a way to do this. Even hacking the .docx and removing the colors supplied for the hyperlink styles seems to make Word 2016 supply default colors.
The only workaround I can find is to hyperlink the text first, and then supply a different color after.
samhsamh