It is just a button with a B on it. It can be used to turn boldface on or off. If it is already on, meaning that clicking it will turn it off, it looks like it has been pushed in.
A word in boldface type looks like this: wordA word is done in boldface type to make it stand out.
The Show/Hide button, which is called a pilcrow. It looks like this: ¶
Formatting - removes all exiting data from the memory card. Think of it like using an eraser to remove all the text written in pencil, on a piece of paper.
what do formatting marks look like fir you are going to formatting a tab
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?
For Microsoft Users: If you have your formatting button activated, it looks like this: ¶ Years ago, we use to call it a paragraph symbol. I still do, but today's proper term for it is a "return" or a "manual line break". If your formatting button isn't activated, you won't be able to see symbols for line breaks, tabs, spacing, and other fun stuff.
To underline a word in a sentence, you can use the formatting option in a word processor like Microsoft Word or Google Docs. Simply select the word you want to underline and click on the underline button in the formatting toolbar. This will apply the underline style to the selected word.
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.
You apply conditional formatting to as many cells on a worksheet as you like.
The button with a paragraph character like a backwards P with an extra riser [ ¶ ]Where you find it depends on the version of Office you are using. Word 2007 has it located in the Home tab. The symbol looks like a bold backwards P. A shortcut is Ctrl + *.
You may be referring to the format painter button, which has a little paintbrush on it. What it does is take the formatting from one cell or a set of cells, and applies it to other cells. So if you do something like put a number into a cell, bold it, colour the cell red, format the number to 2 decimal places and change the font size, that cell will have that formatting. To do the same for other cells may take some time. So what you can do is first select that cell and click on the format painter button. Then you would select a range of cells that you want to apply that formatting to. It will immediately format all the cells to be the same as the original one. It won't change any numbers or formulas in those cells, just change the formatting. So it is painting the formatting of one cell onto other cells.
Its romeo who removes the mask not Juliet