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WordPerfect 11 for Dummies by Margaret Levine Young and David Kay ISBN:0764543520 John Wiley & Sons © 2004 (342 pages) This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog Boxes, and Commands Chapter 3 - Cruising the Document Chapter 4 - Fooling with Blocks of Text Chapter 5 - Making Text Improvements Part II - Prettying Up Your Text Chapter 6 - Giving Your Documents Character Chapter 7 - Sensational Sentences and Pretty Paragraphs Chapter 8 - Perfect Pages and Dashing Documents Chapter 9 - The WordPerfect Secret Decoder Ring Chapter 10 - Documents with Style Part III - Things You Can Do with Documents Chapter 11 - On Paper at Last — Printing Stuff Chapter 12 - Juggling Documents Chapter 13 - Boxing without the Gloves Part IV - Creating Documents That Don’t Just Sit There Chapter 14 - Saying It with Pictures Chapter 15 - Creating Your Own Junk Mail Chapter 16 - Recipes and Templates for Popular Documents Chapter 17 - Publishing Web Pages and the Flying Trapeze Part V - The Part of Tens Chapter 18 - Ten (Or So) Ways to Get WordPerfect to Do It Your Way Chapter 19 - Ten Really Good Suggestions Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars WordPerfect 11 for Dummies by Margaret Levine Young and David Kay ISBN:0764543520 John Wiley & Sons © 2004 (342 pages) This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog Boxes, and Commands Chapter 3 - Cruising the Document Chapter 4 - Fooling with Blocks of Text Chapter 5 - Making Text Improvements Part II - Prettying Up Your Text Chapter 6 - Giving Your Documents Character Chapter 7 - Sensational Sentences and Pretty Paragraphs Chapter 8 - Perfect Pages and Dashing Documents Chapter 9 - The WordPerfect Secret Decoder Ring Chapter 10 - Documents with Style Part III - Things You Can Do with Documents Chapter 11 - On Paper at Last — Printing Stuff Chapter 12 - Juggling Documents Chapter 13 - Boxing without the Gloves Part IV - Creating Documents That Don’t Just Sit There Chapter 14 - Saying It with Pictures Chapter 15 - Creating Your Own Junk Mail Chapter 16 - Recipes and Templates for Popular Documents Chapter 17 - Publishing Web Pages and the Flying Trapeze Part V - The Part of Tens Chapter 18 - Ten (Or So) Ways to Get WordPerfect to Do It Your Way Chapter 19 - Ten Really Good Suggestions Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars Back Cover Remember when life was simple—you typed something, and it ended up on paper? Simplicity is back! This book tells you how to do what you want to do—produce great-looking documents. Of course, if you discover you want more, it also covers adding context-sensitive links to your long documents and other cool stuff. You decide. About the Authors Margaret Levine Young is an author, consultant, and lecturer who has cowritten two dozen computer books. David Kay is an engineer and aspiring artist who has authored 12 books. WordPerfect 11 for Dummies by Margaret Levine Young and David Kay ISBN:0764543520 John Wiley & Sons © 2004 (342 pages) This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog Boxes, and Commands Chapter 3 - Cruising the Document Chapter 4 - Fooling with Blocks of Text Chapter 5 - Making Text Improvements Part II - Prettying Up Your Text Chapter 6 - Giving Your Documents Character Chapter 7 - Sensational Sentences and Pretty Paragraphs Chapter 8 - Perfect Pages and Dashing Documents Chapter 9 - The WordPerfect Secret Decoder Ring Chapter 10 - Documents with Style Part III - Things You Can Do with Documents Chapter 11 - On Paper at Last — Printing Stuff Chapter 12 - Juggling Documents Chapter 13 - Boxing without the Gloves Part IV - Creating Documents That Don’t Just Sit There Chapter 14 - Saying It with Pictures Chapter 15 - Creating Your Own Junk Mail Chapter 16 - Recipes and Templates for Popular Documents Chapter 17 - Publishing Web Pages and the Flying Trapeze Part V - The Part of Tens Chapter 18 - Ten (Or So) Ways to Get WordPerfect to Do It Your Way Chapter 19 - Ten Really Good Suggestions Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars WordPerfect 11 For Dummies by Margaret Levine Young, David C. Kay, and Richard Wagner Published by Wiley Publishing, Inc. 111 River Street Hoboken, NJ 07030 www.wiley.com Copyright © 2004 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana Published by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana Published simultaneously in Canada No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise, except as permitted under Sections 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750-8400, fax (978) 646- 8600. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to the Legal Department, Wiley Publishing, Inc., 10475 Crosspoint Blvd., Indianapolis, IN 46256, (317) 572-3447, fax (317) 572-4447, e- mail: permcoordinator@wiley.com . Trademarks: Wiley, the Wiley Publishing logo, For Dummies, the Dummies Man logo, A Reference for the Rest of Us!, The Dummies Way, Dummies Daily, The Fun and Easy Way, Dummies.com, and related trade dress are trademarks or registered trademarks of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the United States and other countries, and may not be used without written permission. WordPerfect is a registered trademark of Corel Corporation. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Wiley Publishing, Inc., is not associated with any product or vendor mentioned in this book. Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. No warranty may be created or extended by sales representatives or written sales materials. The advice and strategies contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should consult with a professional where appropriate. Neither the publisher nor author shall be liable for any loss of profit or any other commercial damages, including but not limited to special, incidental, consequential, or other damages. For general information on our other products and services or to obtain technical support, please contact our Customer Care Department within the U.S. at 800-762-2974, outside the U.S. at 317-572-3993, or fax 317-572-4002. Wiley also publishes its books in a variety of electronic formats. Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic books. Library of Congress Catalog Control Number: 2003112630 ISBN: 0-7645-4352-0 Manufactured in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 1B/SS/QZ/QT/IN About the Author WordPerfect 11 for Dummies by Margaret Levine Young and David Kay ISBN:0764543520 John Wiley & Sons © 2004 (342 pages) This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog Boxes, and Commands Chapter 3 - Cruising the Document Chapter 4 - Fooling with Blocks of Text Chapter 5 - Making Text Improvements Part II - Prettying Up Your Text Chapter 6 - Giving Your Documents Character Chapter 7 - Sensational Sentences and Pretty Paragraphs Chapter 8 - Perfect Pages and Dashing Documents Chapter 9 - The WordPerfect Secret Decoder Ring Chapter 10 - Documents with Style Part III - Things You Can Do with Documents Chapter 11 - On Paper at Last — Printing Stuff Chapter 12 - Juggling Documents Chapter 13 - Boxing without the Gloves Part IV - Creating Documents That Don’t Just Sit There Chapter 14 - Saying It with Pictures Chapter 15 - Creating Your Own Junk Mail Chapter 16 - Recipes and Templates for Popular Documents Chapter 17 - Publishing Web Pages and the Flying Trapeze Part V - The Part of Tens Chapter 18 - Ten (Or So) Ways to Get WordPerfect to Do It Your Way Chapter 19 - Ten Really Good Suggestions Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars In high school, Margaret Levine Young was in a computer club before there were high school computer clubs. She stayed in the field throughout college, graduated from Yale, and went on to become one of the first PC managers in the early 1980s at Columbia Pictures, where she rode the elevator with big stars whose names she wouldn't dream of dropping here. Since then, Margy has co-authored more than 25 computer books about the topics of the Internet, UNIX, WordPerfect, Microsoft Access, and (stab from the past) PC-File and Javelin, including Access 2003 All- in-One Desk Reference For Dummies , Dummies 101: The Internet For Windows 98 , UNIX For Dummies , and WordPerfect For Linux For Dummies (all published by Wiley Publishing, Inc.), Poor Richard's Building Online Communities (published by Top Floor Publishing), and Windows XP: The Complete Reference and Internet: The Complete Reference (published by Osborne/McGraw-Hill). Aside from explaining computers to anyone who will listen, her other passion is her children, along with music, Unitarian Universalism ( www.uua.org ), reading, and anything to do with eating. She lives in Vermont (see www.gurus.com/margy for some scenery). David C. Kay is a writer, engineer, artist, and naturalist, combining disparate occupations with the same effectiveness as his favorite business establishment, Acton Muffler, Brake, and Ice Cream (now defunct). Dave has written or contributed to more than a dozen computer books, including various editions of WordPerfect 11 For Dummies, Graphics File Formats, and The Complete Reference, Millennium Edition. Besides writing computer books, Dave consults and writes for high-tech firms, and also teaches about wildlife and edible plants. For recreation, he paints theatrical sets, makes strange blobs from molten glass, sings Gilbert and Sullivan choruses in public, and hikes in whatever mountains he can get to. He longs for the Rocky Mountains of Canada, pines for the fjords of New Zealand, and dreams of tracking kiwis and hedgehogs in Wanaka. He feels silly writing about himself in the third person like this and will stop now. Richard Wagner is author of XML All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies , XSLT For Dummies , and over 15 other computer books. He also invented and architected the award-winning NetObjects ScriptBuilder. In his non-tech life, Richard is author of Christian Prayer For Dummies and enjoys writing his Digitalwalk e-zine ( www.digitalwalk.com ). Richard lives with his wife and three boys in Princeton, Massachusetts. Dedication Margy dedicates this book to Jordan, Meg, and Zac, who make life worth living, and to Susan, Don, Hope, Jim, and Monica, the world's best cousins. Richard dedicates this book to Kimberly and the J-team. Authors' Acknowledgments Thanks to Nicole Haims who shepherded this book through the editing and production process. Thanks also to the rest of the gang at Wiley Publishing, especially those listed on the Publisher's Acknowledgement page. Visit our Web site at net.gurus.com for updates and more information about the topics in this book. Publisher's Acknowledgments We're proud of this book; please send us your comments through our online registration form located at www.dummies.com/register/ . Some of the people who helped bring this book to market include the following: Acquisitions, Editorial, and Media Development Project Editor: Nicole Haims Associate Acquisitions Editor: WordPerfect 11 for Dummies by Margaret Levine Young and David Kay ISBN:0764543520 John Wiley & Sons © 2004 (342 pages) This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog Boxes, and Commands Chapter 3 - Cruising the Document Chapter 4 - Fooling with Blocks of Text Chapter 5 - Making Text Improvements Part II - Prettying Up Your Text Chapter 6 - Giving Your Documents Character Chapter 7 - Sensational Sentences and Pretty Paragraphs Chapter 8 - Perfect Pages and Dashing Documents Chapter 9 - The WordPerfect Secret Decoder Ring Chapter 10 - Documents with Style Part III - Things You Can Do with Documents Chapter 11 - On Paper at Last — Printing Stuff Chapter 12 - Juggling Documents Chapter 13 - Boxing without the Gloves Part IV - Creating Documents That Don’t Just Sit There Chapter 14 - Saying It with Pictures Chapter 15 - Creating Your Own Junk Mail Chapter 16 - Recipes and Templates for Popular Documents Chapter 17 - Publishing Web Pages and the Flying Trapeze Part V - The Part of Tens Chapter 18 - Ten (Or So) Ways to Get WordPerfect to Do It Your Way Chapter 19 - Ten Really Good Suggestions Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars Tiffany Franklin Copy Editor: Nicole Haims Technical Editor: Lee Musick Editorial Manager: Carol Sheehan Media Development Manager: Laura VanWinkle Media Development Supervisor: Richard Graves Editorial Assistant: Amanda Foxworth Cartoons: Rich Tennant ( www.the5thwave.com ) Production Project Coordinator: Erin Smith Layout and Graphics: LeAndra Hosier Michael Kruzil Jacque Schneider Shae Wilson Proofreaders: Angel Perez Carl William Pierce Susan Sims Brian H. Walls Indexer: TECHBOOKS Production Services Publishing and Editorial for Technology Dummies Richard Swadley, Vice President and Executive Group Publisher Andy Cummings, Vice President and Publisher Mary C. Corder, Editorial Director Publishing for Consumer Dummies Diane Graves Steele, Vice President and Publisher Joyce Pepple, Acquisitions Director Composition Services Gerry Fahey, Vice President of Production Services Debbie Stailey, Director of Composition Services WordPerfect 11 for Dummies by Margaret Levine Young and David Kay ISBN:0764543520 John Wiley & Sons © 2004 (342 pages) This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog Boxes, and Commands Chapter 3 - Cruising the Document Chapter 4 - Fooling with Blocks of Text Chapter 5 - Making Text Improvements Part II - Prettying Up Your Text Chapter 6 - Giving Your Documents Character Chapter 7 - Sensational Sentences and Pretty Paragraphs Chapter 8 - Perfect Pages and Dashing Documents Chapter 9 - The WordPerfect Secret Decoder Ring Chapter 10 - Documents with Style Part III - Things You Can Do with Documents Chapter 11 - On Paper at Last — Printing Stuff Chapter 12 - Juggling Documents Chapter 13 - Boxing without the Gloves Part IV - Creating Documents That Don’t Just Sit There Chapter 14 - Saying It with Pictures Chapter 15 - Creating Your Own Junk Mail Chapter 16 - Recipes and Templates for Popular Documents Chapter 17 - Publishing Web Pages and the Flying Trapeze Part V - The Part of Tens Chapter 18 - Ten (Or So) Ways to Get WordPerfect to Do It Your Way Chapter 19 - Ten Really Good Suggestions Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars WordPerfect 11 for Dummies by Margaret Levine Young and David Kay ISBN:0764543520 John Wiley & Sons © 2004 (342 pages) This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog Boxes, and Commands Chapter 3 - Cruising the Document Chapter 4 - Fooling with Blocks of Text Chapter 5 - Making Text Improvements Part II - Prettying Up Your Text Chapter 6 - Giving Your Documents Character Chapter 7 - Sensational Sentences and Pretty Paragraphs Chapter 8 - Perfect Pages and Dashing Documents Chapter 9 - The WordPerfect Secret Decoder Ring Chapter 10 - Documents with Style Part III - Things You Can Do with Documents Chapter 11 - On Paper at Last — Printing Stuff Chapter 12 - Juggling Documents Chapter 13 - Boxing without the Gloves Part IV - Creating Documents That Don’t Just Sit There Chapter 14 - Saying It with Pictures Chapter 15 - Creating Your Own Junk Mail Chapter 16 - Recipes and Templates for Popular Documents Chapter 17 - Publishing Web Pages and the Flying Trapeze Part V - The Part of Tens Chapter 18 - Ten (Or So) Ways to Get WordPerfect to Do It Your Way Chapter 19 - Ten Really Good Suggestions Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars Introduction If you thought that the purpose of word processing was to write, not to do amazing things on a computer . . . If you ever secretly wondered who the heck uses all those features advertised on the box your software came in . . . If you'd rather create nice-looking, readable documents, not try to use every possible feature in WordPerfect in 90 seconds flat . . . If you are smart enough to say, 'Call me what you will - I just want to get some work done, please!' . . . Congratulations - you've come to the right place. How to Use This Book Because this book is a reference book, when some feature in WordPerfect has you tying knots in your mouse cord, you can just look up what you want in the table of contents or the index. If your brow is already furrowed from merely looking at the pictures of WordPerfect on the box, check out the early chapters first. These chapters are written for beginners; they speak of mice and menus and similar basics. If you're uncomfortable with Windows or even with computers, you probably should start there. These chapters help you get used to the what, why, and how of giving commands to WordPerfect. After you understand the basics, though, you don't have to read the chapters in any sequence. WordPerfect 11 for Dummies by Margaret Levine Young and David Kay ISBN:0764543520 John Wiley & Sons © 2004 (342 pages) This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog Boxes, and Commands Chapter 3 - Cruising the Document Chapter 4 - Fooling with Blocks of Text Chapter 5 - Making Text Improvements Part II - Prettying Up Your Text Chapter 6 - Giving Your Documents Character Chapter 7 - Sensational Sentences and Pretty Paragraphs Chapter 8 - Perfect Pages and Dashing Documents Chapter 9 - The WordPerfect Secret Decoder Ring Chapter 10 - Documents with Style Part III - Things You Can Do with Documents Chapter 11 - On Paper at Last — Printing Stuff Chapter 12 - Juggling Documents Chapter 13 - Boxing without the Gloves Part IV - Creating Documents That Don’t Just Sit There Chapter 14 - Saying It with Pictures Chapter 15 - Creating Your Own Junk Mail Chapter 16 - Recipes and Templates for Popular Documents Chapter 17 - Publishing Web Pages and the Flying Trapeze Part V - The Part of Tens Chapter 18 - Ten (Or So) Ways to Get WordPerfect to Do It Your Way Chapter 19 - Ten Really Good Suggestions Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars Conventions Used in This Book We try to avoid conventions (too many cocktail parties). Mostly, you find full, robust sentences, not cryptic abbreviations or other so-called conventions. On the other hand, if we always used full sentences such as 'Move the mouse so that the mouse pointer covers the word Edit on the Menu bar and then press the left mouse button; a menu appears and contains the word Cut; move the mouse so that the mouse pointer covers the word Cut, ' you would be comatose by Chapter 2 , and this book would take on encyclopedic dimensions. When we want you to do all that, we say, 'Choose the Edit ® Cut command' instead. When we want you to choose a command from the Menu bar and then choose another command from the submenu that appears, we use this cute little arrow: ® . We also use a few other conventions to make things more readable. When want you to type something, it appears in bold type. On-screen text and Internet addresses look like this . When we suggest pressing two keys at the same time, such as the Ctrl key and the C key, we use a plus sign like this: Ctrl+C. WordPerfect 11 for Dummies by Margaret Levine Young and David Kay ISBN:0764543520 John Wiley & Sons © 2004 (342 pages) This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog Boxes, and Commands Chapter 3 - Cruising the Document Chapter 4 - Fooling with Blocks of Text Chapter 5 - Making Text Improvements Part II - Prettying Up Your Text Chapter 6 - Giving Your Documents Character Chapter 7 - Sensational Sentences and Pretty Paragraphs Chapter 8 - Perfect Pages and Dashing Documents Chapter 9 - The WordPerfect Secret Decoder Ring Chapter 10 - Documents with Style Part III - Things You Can Do with Documents Chapter 11 - On Paper at Last — Printing Stuff Chapter 12 - Juggling Documents Chapter 13 - Boxing without the Gloves Part IV - Creating Documents That Don’t Just Sit There Chapter 14 - Saying It with Pictures Chapter 15 - Creating Your Own Junk Mail Chapter 16 - Recipes and Templates for Popular Documents Chapter 17 - Publishing Web Pages and the Flying Trapeze Part V - The Part of Tens Chapter 18 - Ten (Or So) Ways to Get WordPerfect to Do It Your Way Chapter 19 - Ten Really Good Suggestions Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars Who Am Us, Anyway? This section explains what we assume about you, our esteemed (and, thanks to the joy of software, occasionally steamed) reader: You use a PC that has Windows and WordPerfect 11 installed. You want to create text documents that look nice. You know some basics of working in Microsoft Windows, probably enough to at least browse the Web or check your e-mail. You have a 'guru' available - an expert, like one of those infuriatingly clever 10-year-olds born with a computer cable for an umbilical cord, whom you can call for the really tough stuff and whom you can probably pay off in cookies. You have a standard installation of WordPerfect. WordPerfect is accommodating almost to a fault and lets itself be twisted and restructured like a ball of Silly Putty. If buttons and things on your screen don't look like the buttons in the figures in this book or if your keyboard doesn't work as this book describes, be suspicious that someone got clever and changed things. The differences might be small enough that you can figure out what to do anyway; if not, go find the person who changed things and ask for help. Although we assume that you have a computer guru at your disposal, we also know that gurus can be hard to coax down from the top of the mountain. So we teach you a few of the important guru-type tricks where it's practical, and we suggest appropriate guru bribes when it's not practical. WordPerfect 11 for Dummies by Margaret Levine Young and David Kay ISBN:0764543520 John Wiley & Sons © 2004 (342 pages) This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog Boxes, and Commands Chapter 3 - Cruising the Document Chapter 4 - Fooling with Blocks of Text Chapter 5 - Making Text Improvements Part II - Prettying Up Your Text Chapter 6 - Giving Your Documents Character Chapter 7 - Sensational Sentences and Pretty Paragraphs Chapter 8 - Perfect Pages and Dashing Documents Chapter 9 - The WordPerfect Secret Decoder Ring Chapter 10 - Documents with Style Part III - Things You Can Do with Documents Chapter 11 - On Paper at Last — Printing Stuff Chapter 12 - Juggling Documents Chapter 13 - Boxing without the Gloves Part IV - Creating Documents That Don’t Just Sit There Chapter 14 - Saying It with Pictures Chapter 15 - Creating Your Own Junk Mail Chapter 16 - Recipes and Templates for Popular Documents Chapter 17 - Publishing Web Pages and the Flying Trapeze Part V - The Part of Tens Chapter 18 - Ten (Or So) Ways to Get WordPerfect to Do It Your Way Chapter 19 - Ten Really Good Suggestions Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars How This Book Is Organized Unlike computer manuals, which often seem to be organized alphabetically by height, this book is organized by what you may be trying to do. It doesn't explain, for example, all the commands on the Edit menu in one chapter. Our reasoning is that the Edit commands don't necessarily have anything to do with editing and that Edit is a foolish category because isn't almost everything you do in a word processor a sort of edit anyway? No, what this book does is break things down into the following five useful categories. Part I: Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Part I discusses the basics: your keyboard, your mouse, and the WordPerfect screen, and how they all work together to let you write (or dictate) stuff and make it come out of your printer. Part I is the place to go for some of the basics of using WordPerfect menus, keystrokes, and buttons. It also has information about some of the fancier basics, such as searching and replacing, working with blocks of text, and spell- checking. Part I can even help you if you have never worked in Windows or never even used a computer. Part II: Prettying Up Your Text If you didn't care how your text looked, you wouldn't be using a word processor, would you? What? You say that all you want to do is put something in boldface type or italics? And perhaps also center a heading? And set the margins, too? And put in page numbers? It's all here. Part III: Things You Can Do with Documents You thought that you were just word processing, didn't you? Hah! You are really creating entire documents. And now you have to live with your creation, Dr. Frankenstein. Maybe you want to print your document, for example. Or kill it off altogether by deleting it. Or move it somewhere where it can do no harm. Part III talks all about this kind of stuff. Part IV: Creating Documents that Don't Just Sit There Your document could just be words on a page, but hey, this is the age of magazines with layouts that are so fancy you can hardly read them. You may as well get into the act, too. You can start with borders and columns, and move on to pictures and drawings. After you've created the perfectly illegible document, you can send it out as junk mail or put it on the Web. It's all in Part IV . Part V: The Part of Tens In honor of the decimal system, the Ten Commandments, and the fact that humans have ten fingers, Part V is where we stick other useful stuff. We would have made this part an appendix, but appendixes have no fingers and - look - just check it out, okay? [...]... using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, A list of allusing templates, creatingon your computer borders, and the programs installed Web links, adding appears much more 2 Select WordPerfect Office 11 Table of Contents Another list appears, showing all of the programs that are part of WordPerfect Office 11 WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction 3 Select WordPerfect Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11. .. documents using 1 shows all the available menus WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more Figure 2-1: The Menu bar Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Table 2-1: Introduction WordPerfect Menus Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Menu Description Cross-Reference Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics File Chapter 2 Basic file/document... create has to say looking documents using may learn 11 by formatting beats the heck out of working and see what appeals to you YouWordPerfectsomething, and it documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog... using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, A list of allusing templates, creatingon your computer borders, and the programs installed Web links, adding appears much more 2 Right-click the WordPerfect Office 11 option Table of Contents A pop-up menu appears, displaying a list of commands you can perform WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction 3 Choose Copy from the list Part I - Introducing WordPerfect. .. Get WordPerfect to Do It Your Way Chapter 19 - Ten Really Good Suggestions Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars WordPerfect 11 for Dummies Part I: IntroducingYoung and David WordPerfect ISBN:0764543520Windows 11 for by Margaret Levine Kay John Wiley & Sons © 2004 (342 pages) Chapter List This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting... following section This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog Boxes, and Commands Chapter 3 - Cruising... Property Bar: In WordPerfect, the Property Bar is the spot where you can modify the properties (such as boldness) of text in your documents Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction The Application Bar: The Application Bar is the bar at the very bottom of the WordPerfect window Its Part Ibuttons perform a hodgepodge of tasks - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect. .. page (Pos) This guide will teach you how to create professional looking documents using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics Chapter 2 - Using Toolbars, Dialog Boxes, and Commands Chapter 3 - Cruising... using WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more Knowing when to mouse and when not to mouse Choosing commands from menus Table of Contents WordPerfect the For Dummies Property Bar, and the Application Bar Using 11 Toolbar, the Introduction Part IUsing dialog boxes - Introducing WordPerfect 11 for Windows Chapter 1 - WordPerfect Basics... Get WordPerfect to Do It Your Way Chapter 19 - Ten Really Good Suggestions Index List of Figures List of Tables List of Sidebars Chapter WordPerfect 11 for DummiesBasics ISBN:0764543520 1: WordPerfect by Margaret Levine Young and David Kay John Wiley & Sons © 2004 (342 pages) In This Chapter This guide will teach you how to create professional looking Starting WordPerfect using WordPerfect 11 by formatting . WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect. WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect. WordPerfect 11 by formatting documents, using templates, creating Web links, adding borders, and much more. Table of Contents WordPerfect 11 For Dummies Introduction Part I - Introducing WordPerfect

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