Word Processing - Student Notes
Word Processing - Student Notes
Word Processing
The great advantage of word processing over using a typewriter is that you can make
changes without retyping the entire document. If you make a typing mistake, you simply
back up the cursor and correct your mistake. If you want to delete a paragraph, you
simply remove it, without leaving a trace. It is equally easy to insert a word, sentence, or
paragraph in the middle of a document. Word processors also make it easy to move
sections of text from one place to another within a document, or between documents.
When you have made all the changes you want, you can send the file to a printer to get
a hardcopy.
Uses
Uses of a Word Processor include:
• Authors who write books and scripts for films.
• Lawyers who produce legal documents and contracts.
• Secretaries who write letters.
• Mail order companies who send out the same letters addressed to different
customers.
• Students who write their assignments.
Delete text: Allows you to erase characters, words, lines, or pages as easily as you can
cross them out on paper.
Cut and paste : Allows you to remove (cut) a section of text from one place in a
document and insert (paste) it somewhere else.
Word Wrap: The word processor automatically moves to the next line when you have
filled one line with text, and it will readjust text if you change the margins.
1/9 K Aquilina
Practice
File management: Many word processors contain file management capabilities that
allow you to create, delete, move, and search for files.
Font specifications: Allows you to change fonts within a document. For example, you
can specify bold, italics, and underlining. Most word processors also let you change the
font size and even the typeface.
Graphics: Allows you to embed illustrations and graphs into a document. Some word
processors let you create the illustrations within the word processor; others let you insert
an illustration produced by a different program.
Headers and Footers: Allows you to specify customized headers and footers that the
word processor will put at the top and bottom of every page. For example the word
processor automatically keeps track of page numbers so that the correct number
appears on each page.
Layout: Allows you to specify different margins within a single document and to specify
various methods for indenting paragraphs.
Thesaurus: A built-in thesaurus that allows you to search for synonyms without leaving
the word processor.
Windows: Allows you to edit two or more documents at the same time. Each document
appears in a separate window. This is particularly valuable when working on a large
project that consists of several different files.
Word Wrap: This is the ability of a word processor to start a new line while typing a
paragraph. If the paragraph does not fit in one line, the word is wrapped automatically to
the next line. This makes typing faster.
Page Setup
Allows you to define various page sizes and margins, and the word processor will
automatically readjust the text so that it fits.
AND
Landscape
2/9 K Aquilina
Practice
Spell Check
You can also press the icon from the Standard toolbar or press F7
This is the ability to have the word processor search for a particular word or phrase in a
document and replace it with something else.
3/9 K Aquilina
Practice
Mail Merge
This is the ability to merge together a word processed
letter and a list of names and addresses (from a data
base) so as to generate a multiple 'personalised'
copies of the same letter. A letter can be prepared
using a word processor. Fields like Name, Surname,
Address can be inserted from a database. When mail
merge is done, the fields are replaced by the data
item brought up from the database.
OLE
Object Linking and Embedding. The object to be linked and embedded can be a clipart,
picture and graph. The graph can be created using a spreadsheet and then copied and
pasted in a word processor. The graph is pasted in a special way such that a link is
created between the spreadsheet and the word processor such that if the data is
changed from the spreadsheet, the graph in the word processor is changed immediately
as soon as the data changes.
4/9 K Aquilina
Practice
Styles
The word processor has built in styles that the user can use with ease. The text can be
formatted as a Heading 1 style, or in Normal style. This means that the text is given a
specific font, font size, and other formatting attributes depending on the style chosen.
For example, instead of taking three separate steps to format your title as 16 pt, Arial,
and center-aligned, you can achieve the same result in one step by applying the Title
style.
Note that the Style combo-box only contains a few commonly used styles. If you want to
apply a style that is not available in the Style combo-box, go to the Format menu and
select Style…
This will bring up the Style dialog box. From here one can apply an existing style, modify
an existing style, delete a style or create a new style altogether.
5/9 K Aquilina
Practice
If you have formatted your document using header styles (i.e. Header 1, Header 2, etc),
you can view the structure of your document using the document map. The document
map basically shows you an outline of the headers in your document.
To access the document map, click on the icon on the toolbar or select View |
Document Map.
If you click on any item in the document map, the cursor position in the document also
changes to reflect that choice.
Table of Contents
The word processor has a facility of creating a table of contents based on the styles
given to headings and sub-headings. Pages are found and listed automatically in a
table.
6/9 K Aquilina
Practice
If your document changes, it is likely that the table of contents will become outdated. If
this happens, you need to update it. To do this you have to:
Index
Important words in a document can be marked and then the word processor can be used
to generate an index, showing all marked words sorted in alphabetical order together
with the pages where they can be found.
Creating an index
Once you have marked your terms, you can create the index:
1. Position the cursor at the point were you want the index inserted
2. From the Insert menu choose Index and tables…
3. Select the Index tab
4. Customise the options to your liking and press OK
Updating an index
If your document changes, it is likely that the index will become outdated. If this
happens, you need to update it. To do this you have to:
Multi-Columns
With Microsoft Word, you can also format your document into newspaper-style columns.
8/9 K Aquilina
Practice
If the last column is much shorter than the previous ones, you need to balance out your
columns. To do this:
1. In page layout view, click at the end of the columns you want to balance
2. On the Insert menu, click Break
3. Click continuous
Word inserts a continuous section break, which balances the text equally among the
columns.
9/9 K Aquilina