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These are called "hyperlinks". A hyperlink is a reference or navigation element in a document to another section of the same document or to another document that may be on or part of a (different) domain.
A page break is a formatting feature that divides content into separate pages, allowing for better organization and layout of a document. It marks the end of one page and the beginning of another, making it easier to control where one section ends and another begins within a document.
Insert a section break at the end of the page when you want the next page to have a different header. "Link to previous" will be highlighted. Click on it to undo it. Then you can type the new header on the next page.
In computing, a hyperlink is a reference in a document to an external piece of information. The most common usage is in the Internet to browse through web pages: some text in the current document is highlighted so that when clicked, the browser automatically displays another page or changes the current page to show the referenced content. The highlighted element is known as a hyperlink (or link for short) and makes a logical connection between two places in the same or different documents. Hyperlinks are the basic building block of hypertexts. -wiki
you can do that with simple click and drag to another location anywhere in document
When the document ends on page 30, and the page number is at the bottom of the page.
A document with one page.
A hyperlink is a connection between one page of a hypertext document to another, they appear blue on the page, and are sometimes underlined, but the underline can be disabled with certain HTML. The need of Hyperlink is to it can be used as link to Web sites, to other existing documents, to a document that doesn't yet exist, to another place in the current document or to an e-mail message.
If you mean, how do you get to a new page when you are in a Word document, the answer depends on which version of Word you have. However, the scenario is approximately as follows: From the top menu, Select "Insert" then "Break" then chose "Page Break."
Normal view shows the actual document body. Page layout view show the document as it would appear on a page, so you also see the page, its margins and edges as well as the body of the document.
Dosn't the <Page Down> key do that? or are you asking another question?
page layout