In Word, a hard page break is inserted automatically when you reach the end of a page, signaling the start of a new page. A soft page break occurs dynamically when text flows onto the next page due to formatting changes, while a section break is used to divide different sections of a document with varying formatting. A page footer refers to the area at the bottom of a page where content such as page numbers or text can be added, but it is not a type of break.
A soft page break is automatically inserted.
It is not possible, you need to insert so called section break.Then just make sure that the footer is not "same as previous" and you are done.
it is a automatic page break
I use sections in a word document when typing reports that you may want to change the header or footer. When you create a section break, you can restart page numbers in the footer, for example.
No, actually a soft page break is when the word processing program automatically separates the pages for you (in other words, you are out of room on the previous page, and it automatically continues on to the next). When you manually insert a page break, this is called a hard page break.
Put a section break immediately before and after the page where you want to place the footer. Then in the header/footer toolbar you can de-select the "Link to Previous" icon to create separate footers for each section. There might be other ways to do it too. Alternatively, if you're looking for a footnote, if you go to "References" "Insert footnote" and you will get what you are looking for. You can also customize these so it can be a bit quicker and less tedious.
Manually inserted page breaks (Ctrl+Enter) are "hard". The application will repaginate automatically with "soft" page breaks.
Use manual page breaks [Ctrl+Enter]Or: Insert: Section break: Next page.This last method allows you to have different page formatting in the new section (different orientation, different headers/footers, and a whole bunch of other stuff).
Soft Page Break
Because your pages will be automatically numbered, no matter how many pages you have in the document and what changes you make. There are also extra facilities available, like giving the total of the pages in the document. Again this can be calculated automatically, so you do not have to worry about it or change it as the amount of pages in a document changes. You can also put a standard formatting on them and be sure they are in the same location on each page, or have their positions changing on odd and even numbered pages.
A manually inserted page break is a "hard" break.
A continuous section break begins a new section on the same page.