Create Booklet In Word For Mac 2011

Create Booklet In Word For Mac 2011 8,9/10 1064 votes

Creating a Table of Contents, or TOC, for a document in Microsoft Word 2011 for Mac is not difficult, but it can be tricky to make it look just like you want it. This lesson takes you through the process of creating a dynamic table of contents that can be easily updated to reflect the content in your document. No matter how well book lovers can adapt to the new technology of electronic documents, most of them will agree that nothing – at least for the moment – can replace the feeling of holding printed paperbacks (and har.

Feb 19, 2011 I have just spent the last 2 days working hard on a very difficult translation using a copy of a Word document sent to me by the client. I do not know what version of Word was used to create the original document. About 45 minutes ago my beautiful translation suddenly turned into pages and pages of 'X' s and an 'error report' window came up. So naturally I reported the error to Microsoft, but I've lost all my work. Don't use Word for Mac 2011 or if you do, ensure you make an automatic backup about every 5 minutes.

I foolishly wasn't doing that (though I am now as I work my way again through the entire translation). Laurent KRAULAND wrote: Hello Tom, can you tell us more? I haven't upgraded from Office:mac 2008 yet (and think I already wrote about different and general problems/errors with this version elsewhere on ProZ.com), so I wonder if Office:mac 2011 is worth purchasing - apart from the reintroduction of VBA in Word. After all, I still can do translations with Writer or Pages and use Word:mac only for fixing minor issues (formatting ones being the most prevalent).

Hi Laurent I was just beginning to get used to the new Office:Mac 2011. Ccleaner 3 for mac high sierra. A number of changes have been made to it that seem to me like retrogressive steps rather than progress, notably the disappearance of the formatting palette in Word, which is gone and is now replaced by a fixed side panel - which means that if you're working on a small screen you have a lot less room. I often wonder what the people are thinking who (re)write these applications. In Excel, if you use Find/Replace, the plus is that it now (at last!) tells you how many instances of a term it has changed, but the minus is that having done that, you can't go straight back to what you're working on; you first have to manually close the find/replace palette - which means thousands more clicks you have to do. Mouse clicks worry me because I tend to suffer from RSI (repetitive strain injury).

Another *apparent* plus (until yesterday) was that unlike Word 2004, Word 2011 seemed not to crash (Word 2004 crashes all the time)- so I opened my source and target files and settled down to a long day wrestling with a really problematic translation. Then bingo- at about 9.30 PM ( I don't remember exactly what I was doing as I tend to work like a maniac, intensively) the whole target file suddenly filled itself up with the letter X and using 'undo' had no effect. Was this a virus in the file or a serious glitch in the software? I don't know but automatically, Word opened up an 'error report' application and asked me to send all the details to Micros$ft, including the 2 files (source and target). So MS knew something had gone wrong in the software.