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Creating drawing objects Freeforms I drew won't align evenly.
Instead of using the Align or Distribute command on the Draw menu, try aligning the objects by moving them. Try the following:- Hold down CTRL and press the arrow keys to nudge the freeform in 1-pixel increments.
- If either the Snap objects to grid check box or the Snap objects to other objects check box is selected (Draw menu, Grid command), temporarily turn it off by pressing ALT as you drag a freeform.
I can't rotate a graphic.
Only drawing objects can be flipped or rotated. If you can convert an object to a drawing object by ungrouping it and then grouping it again, you can flip or rotate it. You won't be able to convert a bitmap (bitmap: A picture made from a series of small dots, much like a piece of graph paper with certain squares filled in to form shapes and lines. When stored as files, bitmaps usually have the extension .bmp.) to a drawing object.
- To convert an object, select it, click Ungroup on the Draw menu, and then click Group.
- If you can't convert the object, open it in another drawing program, rotate it there, and then save it. When you reopen it in Microsoft Word, it appears rotated.
Colors within drawing objects aren't smooth.
- Make sure the magnification in the Zoom box (Standard toolbar) is set to 100 percent. Shading patterns can appear distorted at reduced or enlarged views.
- If your monitor is capable of showing only 16 colors, shading may not appear smooth. Shading shows up best on monitors that display 256 or more colors.
Graphics aren't printed when I print my document.
- You might be printing in draft mode. To print the borders and graphics in the document, click Options on the Tools menu, click the Print tab, and then clear the Draft output check box.
- Make sure the Drawing objects option, which prints graphics, is selected. On the Tools menu, click Options, click the Print tab, and then select the Drawing objects check box.
- You may be trying to print the field codes for a linked graphic rather than printing the graphic itself. On the Tools menu, click Options, and then click the Print tab. Clear the Field codes check box.
- Microsoft Word or the operating system might be low on memory. Do one or more of the following:
- Quit any other programs you're running.
- Save the document you want to print, and then close any other windows you have open.
- Switch to print layout view (print layout view: A view of a document or other object as it will appear when you print it. For example, items such as headers, footnotes, columns, and text boxes appear in their actual positions.). On the Tools menu, click Options, click the View tab, and then clear the Picture placeholders, Status bar, Vertical ruler, Horizontal scroll bar, and Vertical scroll bar check boxes.
- Switch to normal view (normal view: A view that shows text formatting and a simplified page layout. Normal view is convenient for most editing and formatting tasks.). On the Tools menu, click Options, and then click the View tab. In the Style area width box, type 0 (zero).
- Hide the toolbars. On the View menu, click Toolbars, and then clear all check boxes.
- Quit Word, and then restart it.
- Quit all open programs, and then restart your computer.
- Disconnect any network connections, and then quit terminate-and-stay-resident programs (TSRs) and any other utilities you usually run.
When I insert a graphic, only part of it appears.
The line spacing in your document may be set to an exact amount that is smaller than the height of the graphic. Select the graphic, click Paragraph on the Format menu, and then click the Indents and Spacing tab. In the Line spacing box, click Single. If you select Exactly in the Line spacing box, be sure to increase the measurement in the At box to the height of the graphic. I know I inserted a graphic, but I don't see it on the page.
- You may have turned on the Picture placeholders view option. When a document contains pictures, turning on this option improves scrolling speed by displaying outlines instead of the pictures. To display the pictures, click Options on the Tools menu, click the View tab, and then clear the Picture placeholders check box.
- You may have turned off the Drawings view option. Turning off this option improves scrolling speed when a document contains drawing objects, such as AutoShapes (AutoShapes: A group of ready-made shapes that includes basic shapes, such as rectangles and circles, plus a variety of lines and connectors, block arrows, flowchart symbols, stars and banners, and callouts.). To display drawings, click Options on the Tools menu, click the View tab, and select the Drawings check box.
- Field codes for linked inline graphics may be displayed. Field codes are instructions enclosed in field characters ({}). To hide field codes and display your graphic, press ALT+F9.
- The graphic you want to see may be a drawing object — such as a text box, an AutoShape, clip art, or WordArt. Drawing objects are not visible in normal view (normal view: A view that shows text formatting and a simplified page layout. Normal view is convenient for most editing and formatting tasks.). To view, draw, and modify drawing objects, you must be working in print layout view (print layout view: A view of a document or other object as it will appear when you print it. For example, items such as headers, footnotes, columns, and text boxes appear in their actual positions.), Web layout view (Web layout view: A view of a document as it will appear in a Web browser. For example, the document appears as one long page (without page breaks) and text and tables wrap to fit in the window.), or print preview (print preview: A view of a document as it will appear when you print it.).
- You might be working in normal or outline view (outline view: A view that shows the headings of a document indented to represent their level in the document's structure. You can also use outline view to work with master documents.). To see how objects such as headers, footers, or drawing objects will be positioned on the printed page, switch to print layout view. To see how these objects will appear on a Web page, switch to Web layout view.
Working with text and graphics I can't move a text box or AutoShape.
Select the object by clicking its border, and then drag. Microsoft Word indicates you can move an object by changing the pointer to a four-headed arrow.
Text won't flip or rotate with its text box or AutoShape.
To rotate the text in a text box or AutoShape, click the text, click Text Direction on the Format menu, and then click the orientation you want. Using the Rotate or Flip command (Draw menu on the Drawing toolbar) causes only the object, not the text it contains, to change its direction.
I can't keep a drawing object on the same page as its accompanying text.
- You can group the drawing object and the text box — a type of drawing object.
- Make sure the anchor for the text box is next to the accompanying text.
- If you're adding a caption to a drawing object, make sure you select the object before you click Caption (Insert menu, Reference submenu). Also make sure the anchor for the caption is associated with the same paragraph as the anchor for the drawing object.
Text isn't wrapping around my graphic.
- If you want the text to wrap tightly and completely around the graphic, make sure that the correct wrapping style is selected. To check this, click the graphic, and then click the command on the Format menu for the type of object you selected — for example, AutoShape or Picture. On the Layout tab, make sure that Tight is selected under Wrapping style.
- Drawings created with the Lines tool (Drawing toolbar, AutoShapes menu) sometimes appear jagged, which may result in text not wrapping tightly around the drawing. You can fix this by making the lines smoother.
Consider the following when selecting a tool from the Lines category to draw lines, curves, or shapes that combine both lines and curves. When you want a drawing object to look as if it was drawn with a pen, use the Scribble
tool. The resulting shape closely matches what you draw on the screen. Use the Freeform
tool when you want a more refined shape — one without jagged lines or drastic changes in direction. When you want to draw curves with greater control and accuracy, use the Curve
tool.
- If you're wrapping text around a freeform (freeform: Any shape that you draw by using the Curve, Freeform, and Scribble tools. Freeform shapes can include straight lines and freehand curves. They can be drawn opened or closed and can be edited by using the drawing tools.) drawing, you can adjust the shape of freeforms to make them look smoother.
I created a watermark that overshadows the main document text.
If the watermark interferes with the legibility of the text on the page, you can lighten the object you used to create the watermark.
-
If you are using a picture, make sure that the Washout check box is selected in the Printed Watermark dialog box.
-
If you are using text, select the Semitransparent box in the Printed Watermark dialog box, or select a lighter color, such as light gray, in the Color box.
Aligning and arranging graphics I can't move my paragraph without moving my graphic.
The anchor for the drawing object is locked to the paragraph you want to move. Select the drawing object, and then click the applicable command on the Format menu: AutoShape, Object, Picture, Text Box, or WordArt. Click the Layout tab, and then click Advanced. On the Picture Position tab, clear the Move object with text and Lock anchor check boxes.
Importing graphics I don't have the correct graphics filter to import a graphic.
- Make sure that you have installed the necessary graphics filter. On the Insert menu, point to Picture, click From File, and then check the list of filters in the Files of type box. If the filter you need is not listed, you may need to install it.
- If the graphics filter you need to import a graphic is not shipped with Word, you need to open the file in a drawing program. Then you can select the graphic, copy it, and paste it to your document. The graphic becomes a Windows metafile (.wmf).
- Open the file in another drawing program, and then save it in a format that can be imported into Word.
The text of the document was converted correctly, but the graphics disappeared.
- Make sure that you have turned on the display of graphics. On the Tools menu, choose Options, and then click the View tab. Clear the Picture placeholders check box.
- Make sure that you have installed the necessary graphics filter. On the Insert menu, point to Picture, click From File, and then check the list of filters in the Files of type box. If the filter you need is not listed, you might need to install it.
I can't ungroup an imported picture.
Most imported pictures, such as bitmaps (bitmap: A picture made from a series of small dots, much like a piece of graph paper with certain squares filled in to form shapes and lines. When stored as files, bitmaps usually have the extension .bmp.), GIFs (GIF: A graphics file format (.gif extension in Windows) used to display indexed-color graphics on the World Wide Web. It supports up to 256 colors and uses lossless compression, meaning that no image data is lost when the file is compressed.), and JPEGs (JPEG: A graphics file format (.jpg extension in Microsoft Windows) supported by many Web browsers that was developed for compressing and storing photographic images. It's best used for graphics with many colors, such as scanned photos.) can't be ungrouped and converted to drawing objects.
You can modify imported pictures in an imaging program. For example, to flip or rotate a bitmap image, open it in a program such as Microsoft Photo Editor, flip or rotate it, and then insert it in your document.
I edited an animated GIF, and now the animation is gone.
Certain types of edits, such as cropping or grouping, will cause an animated GIF picture to be saved as a new picture and lose its animation. To preserve the animation, make the changes in an animated GIF editing program, and then insert the file again.
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