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Special Edition Using® Microsoft® Office 2003
book

Special Edition Using® Microsoft® Office 2003

by Ed Bott, Woody Leonhard
September 2003
Beginner to intermediate content levelBeginner to intermediate
1368 pages
56h 14m
English
Que
Content preview from Special Edition Using® Microsoft® Office 2003
547
Adding a Table to a Document
Create data-entry forms for online use.
To learn more about entering data in Word forms, see “Creating a Data-Entry Form,” p. 615.
Place text in a fixed location on a page. Any time you’re thinking about using tab stops
to arrange text or graphics on a page, consider using tables (without gridlines) instead.
In general, tables are faster and easier to set up, and much simpler to maintain.
In Word 2003, you can draw one table inside another—a very handy trick if you use tables
for page layouts. Each “nested table” appears, in its entirety, within a single cell in the larger
outer table.
Adding a Table to a Document ...
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Publisher Resources

ISBN: 0789729555Purchase Link