I removed the bold, but when I copied the table back in from the clean document I’d put it into, the first row was bolded again. Nothing worked.Īdded to my dilemma was the first row, which was in bold text. I tried all sorts of things to get rid of it, including putting the table in a new doc then bringing it back in to the original doc. I could get rid of it by reapplying the ‘No borders’ setting, but that border came back as I added more and more rows. Each new row I added had a gray horizontal internal border. And that seemed to work, until I had to add new rows at the end of the table for extra terms I found in the document. However, instead of using the borderless table in the template, the author had inserted their own table, which had dashed borders.Įasy enough to fix - just set the ‘No borders’ attribute to the table. As per our house style, it had a table of terms in it. I got a Word 2007 document to edit the other day from one of my colleagues.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |