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quick access toolbar
go to start and click run
To customize the Quick Access Toolbar 1. Click the Office button, Word Options to display the Word Options dialog box. OR 2. Click the More down arrow to the right of the Quick Access Toolbar and click More Commands. OR 3. Right click in any blank area of the Ribbon. Click Customize Quick Access Toolbar. You are taken to the Word Options menu with the Customize button highlighted. From here you can add, remove and re-organise your Quick Access Toolbar icons. 1. Check through the options listed in the Choose commands from: drop down list. 2. Highlight a command you use frequently. 3. Click the Add button to display the command in the right side column. 4. Do this a few times to add some useful commands to the Quick Access Toolbar. 5. Organise the items in the list into the order you will want to see them on the toolbar, using the up and down arrows. 6. Separate groups with a Separator which you will find at the top of each of the lists. 7. Tick the Show Quick Access Toolbar below the ribbon check box to move the toolbar to the location below the ribbon. 8. Click OK. You are returned to your document, but now you will see a new bar underneath your ribbon with the commands you selected. The Quick Way to insert a single command 1. Right click on any command on the Ribbon 2. Click Add to Quick Access Toolbar. The command will be placed at the right hand end of the Quick Access Toolbar.
The Task bar
Well honestly the quick access toolbar is the quick access toolbar.
It stands for Quick Access Toolbar. It is a toolbar that has some of the more common things that people use like Undo, Save and Print. A user can change what tools are on it.
The menu that offers you quick access to your preference destinations from the menu bar, and which pops up when you right click on an area or an item on screen is the pop up menu.
click and drag once the cursor is on a button, click and hold down then while still holding drag it in new place on toolbar.
In Access 2010, Auto-format has been replaced with themes, but you can still use the auto-format function. To use auto-format, you have to add it to either your quick access toolbar or in one of your ribbons. To add it, right click on either your quick access toolbar or ribbon and select "Customize the ribbon". On the menu that pops up, Select "Commands not in the Ribbon" under the 'Choose commands from' pulldown. You will see the auto-format command around 5 places down from the top. In order to add it to your ribbon, you have to create a custom group, but you can put it anywhere. For the quick access toolbar, you just click and drag.
In Access 2010, Auto-format has been replaced with themes, but you can still use the auto-format function. To use auto-format, you have to add it to either your quick access toolbar or in one of your ribbons. To add it, right click on either your quick access toolbar or ribbon and select "Customize the ribbon". On the menu that pops up, Select "Commands not in the Ribbon" under the 'Choose commands from' pulldown. You will see the auto-format command around 5 places down from the top. In order to add it to your ribbon, you have to create a custom group, but you can put it anywhere. For the quick access toolbar, you just click and drag.
Which of the following features doesn’t relate to the quick access toolbar
To access something quickly?