There is no answer to that. A document can be of any size, dependent only on the size of your computer's memory. Also, characters can be of different sizes and fonts and so could take up different amounts of space in your document.. The formatting of characters also takes up memory space and space in a document, so more formatting will take up more memory and some formatting will take up more space. These are just some factors as to why there is no single answer to the question. There would be many other factors too.
I recommend Aceoffix. It can not only fill data in your Word document but also view the Word document in your web page. It does not use Office automation on server side and it is very easy to use. It is a visual asp.net control for Microsoft Office.
If you mean on the computer it is whether or not you have variations of the same colour on a Microsoft document
Microsoft Office Document Imaging can be used for a number of different tasks. Microsoft Office Document Imaging can be used to scan documents, read scanned documents, fill out forms online, email scanned documents, and much more.
Depends on the font size.
The definition of text effects in Microsoft Word is changing the look of text. It can be done by adding shadows, reflections, or glows and by changing the fill or the outline of the letters.
depends how many words
Microsoft word does not have an autofill to automatically fill in forms with info such as name, account umbers, DOB, etc. It does have a type of auto complete, where it will guess the word you are typing. You may use a macro to get autofill in Word.
It's Simple just go to fill color coloumn in the drawing toolbar and click on fill effects,then click picture and select your picture and click ok.
A notary will fill in the date the document in question is notarized, the date of his or her expiration and the county and state in which they operate. They will sign after the document is signed in their presence.
Microsoft word- Select the word you'd like to apply a background to, then go to the far left of the window, click the "fill" button and tah-dah. you've applied a background to your text!
Using the Draw tool can make the circles that you then fill in with black. You can then resize them how you like and then copy for each set.
Place cursor on the end of the word you want to append the footnote to. Then on the toolbar under "Insert" select "Reference" then "Footnote". Fill in the footnote. Tip 1: If possible format the Footnote style before you start your document. Tip 2: So you don't miss any, put all the footnote numbers in as you create the document. Type the footnotes later; the document will auto adjust to keep the footnotes on the page on which they are referenced.