If you need to change the style of your text but have added direct formatting to it; bold text or italic text, beware! MS Word can really mess it up.
Here's an experiment to try to explain what I mean
Set up a document containing these two
styles:
Normal
Font: (Default) Times New Roman,
11 pt,
Indent: First line:
0.5 cm, Justified
Line spacing: single,
Widow/Orphan control,
Style: Quick Style
No Indent
Style: Linked, Quick Style
Following style: Normal
Now type this in in 'Normal' style:
Using ‘Normal’
style, copy these two paragraphs of text into MS Word. Make this first
paragraph italic.
Using Normal style, copy these two paragraphs
of text into MS Word. In this second paragraph make just the last word italic.
Now select the first paragraph and change its style. I’m
going to make it, my style of ‘No Indent’.
Now select the second paragraph and change its style. Again
change it to ‘No Indent’.
After applying ‘No Indent’ style to each separate paragraph:
Now undo the ‘No Indent’ style changes, select both paragraphs and then re-apply ‘No Indent’ style to both at once. You get:
Notice what
happens to the italics? The same thing happens for any other direct formatting
you apply whether it’s a font, a font size, bold, italics, color… whatever.
Apparently
the rule is meant to be that if a paragraph has less than 50% of direct
formatting then this will be retained if the style is changed. If it has more
than 50% then the direct formatting is lost.
…but it’s
not consistent!
Select more
than one paragraph and all the direct formatting is changed.
…but even
that is not consistent!
If you have
a document with multiple styles and you wish to change just one of them, then right
clicking the style, selecting all X instance(s) and then changing the selected
items may give you either effect.
So how do you do it?
I had a book which used a ‘Publisher’ style.
I wanted to change this to a ‘Normal’ style. The trouble was I had used italics
for emphasis, the remote ends of telephone conversations and thoughts. Simply
selecting all occurrences of the ‘Publisher’ style and replacing them with ‘Normal’
style lost lots of the italics – too many for me to want to go through and
change them all back manually. Here’s what I did:
Step 1 –
find all the italics using search & replace and highlight them in green. To
do that
- Select ‘Replace from the Home toolbar
- Use Format > Font and select ‘Italic’ in both the find and replace boxes.
- Select green highlighting from the home toolbar.
- Select Format > Highlight
Step 2 – Select all instances of the style you
want to change and change them to the new style. Some of the italics will be
lost but the green highlighting will remain.
Step 3 Use
the replace menu to find all instances of green highlighting and replace them
with italics and no highlighting.
This method
can be used if you’ve used bold, colored or any other direct formatting within
a style. You might want to use a different highlight color for each.
What a
tedious chore! I can understand why Microsoft did this but it would have been
so much nicer if they had given us a checkbox labelled ‘Change all direct
formatting within style.’
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If this post has proved useful to you would you do me a favour in return? Download a FREE copy of the book I co-author - a romantic technothriller called 'Immortality Gene'. Even if you don't read it it will help our ratings. You can get it at http://smarturl.it/avi and if you want to read it, you can use a phone, a tablet, a computer or even a Kindle.
Follow @JChapmanAuthor