Microsoft word url wrap


















You can see for yourself by checking the selection's style—it's Hyperlink! So is the hyperlink in the middle—where you manually changed the underline and font color properties.

It's still a hyperlink as well. This is all basic and works well for individual links. When changing multiple links, this manual process is tedious, so let's look at a method that updates all hyperlinks at once. If you have several links you want to change, changing the style is the quickest route. Doing so will change all hyperlinked references, so it's an-all-or-nothing venture. When doing so, you can modify the underlying template, Normal, but I recommend that you not do so—unless you really mean to remove the underlined blue text from your life forever.

OK, you can always revert, but you'll need to remember that you changed the Hyperlink style. Right now, you have an example of the hyperlink display that you want—the middle one. There's no underline and the font color is Automatic or black or whatever you want.

When you have an example in the document, the quickest way to update everything is use that text as follows:. As you can see in Figure E , all three hyperlinks they really are hyperlinks look like ordinary text. Beyond that, any new links you create or paste into the document will also be black text with no underline—but they will be hyperlinks. In step 1 of the previous exercise, I told you to select the entire element hyperlink for the best results.

If you click it, you lose the underline property because it's a character property. When you update the style, it won't remove the underline from existing links, and the underline will persist in new links. In addition, we updated the style in the current document.

We didn't update the Normal template. Doing so isn't available using this quick route. I have a URL that has dashes in it and is longer than one line. Word wants to wrap this at the dashes which makes for some bad formatting if the dash is early in the URL then I have a short part on one line and the rest on the next line.

When you copy a non-breaking hyphen and then paste it into a browser's location bar, it is pasted as a space, when this occurs within a URL this breaks the URL and makes it invalid.

Another solution is to insert no-width optional spaces but for some reason Word seems to refuse to insert them. Although something is occurring because I can "undo" it and it does not undo my last visible edit. Anyone have any other suggested solutions? I really just want a simple hard line wrap like in many other text editors. This thread is locked. You can follow the question or vote as helpful, but you cannot reply to this thread.

Word uses these characters to break the URL at reasonable positions, and you control what those positions are. The URL is just the example text. You can use this optional break character to break any type of connected text, not just URLs. Susan Sales Harkins is an IT consultant, specializing in desktop solutions. Previously, she was editor in chief for The Cobb Group, the world's largest publisher of technical journals.

Editor's Picks. The best programming languages to learn in Check for Log4j vulnerabilities with this simple-to-use script. TasksBoard is the kanban interface for Google Tasks you've been waiting for.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000