Quote:
Originally Posted by otuatail
Firstly. I have always called them style sheets as they are styles on the ribbon. I am going to need help though with saving a borderless (quick table) table. How is that acheved?
I have inserted a simple table and to my suprise the styles can work within the cells. I was not expecting that. And with a bit of tinkering around by duplicating them I could make them look great. The positioning would have to be the same every time.
Also having problems with the brackets. As above the table (Being a bit coy)
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The Styles on the Ribbon are a small subset of the styles in a document. They are designated as Quick Styles and can be part of Quick Style Sets.
Customizing the Quick Styles Gallery by Suzanne Barnhill, MVP
To create a borderless table and save it to Quick Tables
- Create a Table.
- Set it up for one speaker followed by two speakers.
- Select it.
- Under the Table Design Tab under Borders pick no borders
- With the table still selected, under Insert > Table > Quick Tables add it to the Gallery.
00 deleteme 3.png
- If you want to use AutoComplete save it to some template other than the Building Blocks.dotx template. Preferably your document template or a global template. See AutoComplete - for AutoText and Other Building Blocks - Microsoft Community
- Give it a name that you can remember and that starts with unique characters you will not type by accident. I know of people using underscores_, the at symbol@, or an exclamation mark! at the start. This gives something that will show up at the top of the alphabetical order in galleries and makes AutoComplete work well. For instance your could name it @duoTable. If you have saved it for AutoComplete to work, when you type "@duot" a screentip will tell you to press Enter to insert your table. My _OWI_Interview table is such a table.
- You can also assign a keyboard shortcut to such a Quick Table. Assigning Keyboard Shortcuts in Microsoft Word 2007-2021 (365)