hard page break
hard page break
Hard page break.
A manually inserted page break is a "hard" break.
A soft page break is automatically inserted.
hard page break
Manually inserted page breaks (Ctrl+Enter) are "hard". The application will repaginate automatically with "soft" page breaks.
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.
back gound repagination
hard page break or manual page break
In word processing, a hard page break is a break that occurs at a particular place in the text, forcing the next word to the top of a new page. A hard break never changes its position relative to the text even if words before it are deleted, so the new page will always start with the same word even if text on prior page doesn't extend to the bottom margin. Because they occur at a specific point in the text, hard page breaks are normally inserted manually by the document's author. A soft page break is a break whose position is determined by the word processing program when the document's text fills one page to its bottom margin. The following word is forced to the top of a new page, but if text in the prior page is deleted words from the next page are moved back.
a hard page break