You can do through menus. However, when you are in the table, a small square appears above the top left corner. There is a 4 headed arrow in it. If you click on it, then the whole table will be selected. You can also click above the first column and drag across, or beside the first row and drag down.
No. If you do a triple click beside a paragraph, you can select a page.
You will then select the entire paragraph in which the word is located.
highlight it, then right click and hit copy.
In MS Word Tables, it is possible to have lines that are not printable but that show on the screen to tell you that a table is there. This is usually the default condition. To change them so that some or all lines print, select the entire table, open the table properties and select the Borders and Shading... button. In the Borders tab, select the kind of lines you want and then click on OK. You can get to the same place by selecting the entire table, then using the Format pull-down menu and select Borders and shading...
create a Word table, Select the entire table and Copy, paste into an Excel doc, save Excel doc as .csv
YES, select text you want to convert, then click Inserttab to expand, click on Table and choose Convert Text to Table... from list.
Go to file > Page Setup > under the second section Orientation press LandscapeIt also depends on what version of Microsoft Word that you are using. In the latest Word which is 2007, click on the page layout tab at the top, click the orientation button and then select landscape. It is the same concept but can be found in different places.
Select the entire table. Then use the paragraph formatting options to centre it. Alternatively, press the Ctrl - E shortcut combination.
select whole word
Yes, that is correct. Triple click to select the entire document.
Click the References tab, click the Table of Contents button
If you want to make a table in Word, you need to click 'insert', click the table box, and then choose the number of rows and columns you want to have in your table.