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Clarification of the original question:I have a 2000 page document with several thousand instances of formatting in two forms that need to be changed. They forms needing to be changed look like this: 1. you2i2. you 2iI need all of these abberent instances to be changed to:1. you2iThe built-in Copy/ReplaceAll feature only allows the formatting to be of one kind at a time, not mixed formatting. It removes mixed formatting when using the "ReplaceAll" feature. What is the solution?
Conditional formatting means that a cell will be formatted differently based on values. So when values change, the formatting may changed. Formatting will not be suppressed, just changed, which is the whole point of conditional formatting.
While formatting in word processing applications, Hard formatting deals with formatting a few pages of a document using tool bars icons, keyboard shortcuts keys and menu bars whereas soft formatting deals with formatting a large number of pages using styles.
Clarification of the original question:I have a 2000 page document with several thousand instances of formatting in two forms that need to be changed. They forms needing to be changed look like this: 1. you2i2. you 2iI need all of these abberent instances to be changed to:1. you2iThe built-in Copy/ReplaceAll feature only allows the formatting to be of one kind at a time, not mixed formatting. It removes mixed formatting when using the "ReplaceAll" feature. What is the solution?Read more: How_In_Microsoft_Word_2010_The_built-in_CopyReplaceAll_feature_only_allows_the_formatting_to_be_of_one_kind_at_a_time_not_mixed_formatting_so_how_to_do_mixed_formatting
This is a statement referring to conditional formatting, but is not a question. If conditional formatting is not what you are looking for, then ask again, using words that make it clear what you want to know.
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No, not necessarily. A lot of formatting will stay the same. There are instances when formatting will change, like when using Conditional Formatting. Typing data in a particular way into a cell that clearly identifies its data format can also change the formatting, like if you type a time into a cell.
A chemical element, or an element, is a material which cannot be broken down further or changed into another substance by using chemical means.
The formatting using its own file system is logical drive.
Yes, using Conditional formatting you can get different colours and formatting settings depending on the values in the current or other cells.