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."
You can do it by clicking with the mouse to where you want it to be, or in many ways with the keyboard. These generall involve the navigation keys including the arrow keys, Home, End, Page Up and Page Down. Using these with various other keys allow you to change the insertion point. For example, using Ctrl and the left or right arrow, allows you to move the insertion point by one word at a time.
To quickly move the insertion point to the next or previous page, section, line, table, graphic, or other items of the same type in a document, you can use the "Go To" feature, typically accessible via the keyboard shortcut Ctrl + G (or Command + G on Mac). This allows you to specify the item type you want to navigate to, such as a page number or heading. Additionally, using navigation keys like Page Up and Page Down can also help quickly move through different sections of the document.
Go to
page break
In Excel, to the first cell in the current row. in Word, to the start of the current line of text..
Ctrl + G (Go To)Enter the page numberhit
It means that when you insert a page break, no matter where you are at the page, whether at the top or bottom, it will automatically start a new page. This helps you from not wasting time by pressing Enter 100 times to go to a new page.
hard page break or manual page break
place insertion point anywhere in document, press Ctrl + A on keyboard ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Another method is to: -select Home tab on the Ribbon -choose Editing Group (rightmost) -Click Select -Choose Select All See link below.
If you're talking about navigating a document or perhaps a website, the arrow keys can move you around. If you're tying a document and want to immediately jump the end or beginning of the current line you're residing on, you can use the HOME and END keys. PAGE UP and PAGE DOWN also will scroll up and down, but will scroll more at a time than the arrow keys.
A Page Break. Page break is the point where you wish your page to end. It can be just after entering two lines or 10 lines. Beyond that point nothing can be written on that page. If text is already present there, it is moved on to the next page. Go to Insert tab in ribbon menu, towards the left, you will find 'Page break' insertion button. Deleting an existing page break is bit more technical though.
When the document ends on page 30, and the page number is at the bottom of the page.