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Troubleshoot using styles and applying formatting
Commands and buttons for applying formatting and styles are unavailable. Document protection for formatting may be turned on. When formatting is restricted with this feature, you can format text only by applying a specific selection of styles. To view the styles that are available, click Styles and formatting on the Formatting toolbar.Note If you know the password to remove document protection, click Unprotect Document on the Tools menu, and then type the password in the Password box. A style has changed unexpectedly.
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Automatic updating may be turned on for the style With automatic updating, a style is updated when you make additional changes to it, so that certain elements in your document — such as headings — are consistent. You can turn off this setting by modifying the style.
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If the Styles and Formatting
task pane (task pane: A window within an Office application that provides commonly used commands. Its location and small size allow you to use these commands while still working on your files.) is not open, click Styles and Formatting
on the Formatting toolbar.
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Right-click the style that you want to change, and then click Modify.
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If the Automatically update check box is selected, clear it.
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Your style may be based on another style that has changed When a base style (base style: The underlying or original style on which other styles in a document are dependent. When you change a formatting element of the base style in a document, all other styles that originate from the base style will also reflect the change.) changes, so do all the styles that are dependent on it. For example, if you change the font in the Normal style (Normal style: The default paragraph style used in documents based on the Normal template (Normal.dot).) to Arial, Microsoft Word changes the font for the styles used in footnotes, headers, footers, page numbers, and other text based on the Normal style.
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If you don't want a certain style to change when you change a base style, make certain that your style is not based on another style, or at least not on the base style that you're changing.
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If the Styles and Formatting task pane is not open, click Styles and Formatting
on the Formatting toolbar.
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Right-click the style that you want to change, and then click Modify.
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In the Style based on box, click (no style) or a style different from the base style you're changing.
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The document may be based on a template that changed If you change the styles in a template (template: A file or files that contain the structure and tools for shaping such elements as the style and page layout of finished files. For example, Word templates can shape a single document, and FrontPage templates can shape an entire Web site.) and then reopen a document based on that template, styles in the current document may be updated, based on their new definitions in the template. If you don't want the styles in documents based on a particular template to be updated when you open the documents, click Templates and Add-Ins on the Tools menu, and then clear the Automatically update document styles check box.
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The template that contains the style definitions may be missing or damaged If the template that contains the style definitions is missing or damaged, styles in the current document use the style definitions from the Normal template (Normal template: A global template that you can use for any type of document. You can modify this template to change the default document formatting or content.).
Applying a style turns off bold, italic, or underlining.
The format you apply by using a paragraph style or character style may change the existing character formatting of the text. For example, when you apply a built-in heading style such as Heading 1 to underlined text, the underlining disappears. This will not occur if you format the characters after you apply the style.
When I used the Style Gallery, the template didn't change.
The Style Gallery is not used for changing the template attached to your document; you use it to view or apply styles from other templates to your document. To attach a different template to your document, click Templates and Add-Ins on the Tools menu.
I can't redefine the Normal style.
When you apply a style to text, change the text formatting, and then reapply the style, Microsoft Word can prompt you to either update the style based on the new formatting or reapply the style as it was last defined.
By contrast, when you apply the Normal style (Normal style: The default paragraph style used in documents based on the Normal template (Normal.dot).) to text, Word does not give you the option to update the style. Instead of prompting you either to redefine or reapply the Normal style, Word automatically reapplies the Normal style, and overwrites the formatting changes you made.
To redefine the Normal style, do the following:
- If the Styles and Formatting
task pane (task pane: A window within an Office application that provides commonly used commands. Its location and small size allow you to use these commands while still working on your files.) is not open, click Styles and Formatting
on the Formatting toolbar.
- In the Styles and Formatting task pane, right-click Normal, and then click Modify.
- To permanently redefine the Normal style, select the Add to template check box.
- Make any changes that you want.
- To see more options, click Format, and then click the attribute — such as Font or Numbering — you want to change.
- Make the changes you want, and then click OK.
- Repeat steps 4 and 5 for any additional attributes you want to change.
I can't copy styles between documents or templates.
Your access to the document or template to which you want to copy styles, macros, or AutoText entries might be restricted in one of the following ways:
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Protected except for comments or tracked changes To remove protection, click Unprotect Document on the Tools menu. If the document is protected with a password (password: A sequence of characters needed to access computer systems, files, and Internet services. Strong passwords combine uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols.), you must know the password before you can remove protection from the document.
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Protected with a password to modify You can open the document or template, but you can't save changes to it without the password.
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Protected as a read-only file You can open the document or template, but if you change it, you need to give it a different file name to be able to save it.
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Limited to users with network privileges If the document or template you're trying to access is on a network, you might not have the user privileges necessary to save changes to it.
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