![]() ![]() Apply Heading 2 style to the titles on these pages.Apply Heading 1 style to the titles on these pages:.Insert the Plain Number 3 page number, at the Bottom of page.Open the Input Devices Project Practice document.Follow the steps below to provide her with the assistance she needs. Sherica has almost completed her school project however, she needs some assistance in completing the Table of Contents. The table of contents will then update to reflect any changes. ![]() I was more interested in seeing how the bullets would be implemented.4. The underline was just to check formatting. ![]() In addition, the Blogging to… title was underlined. ![]() This line, as well as the following one, are bullet points. This is the only picture that was changed by adding a border to it. The rest of the pictures were snapped (by the world's best screen capture program SnagIt), and pasted into Word. I'm also curious to see how more complex (overlapping) formatting works. The greater than and less than characters can be problematic, as they are typically characters that indicate code, particularly in XML. NOTE is in red, the entire line is in italics, it contains a URL, and a smiley set (in italics this time though.) It also contains the "greater than" and "less than" signs around the "Enter your blog URL here" phrase. These were apparently an issue in Word Beta2, so I want to see if they were truly fixed. How does bold formatting implement, and how are images in Word dealt with?Ĭontains "smart quotes", not plain old regular ones (Actually, you can see the smiley in the category image just above.)Ĭontains words formatted in bold, and is followed by an image Second, the happy face (colon + closing parenthesis) already converted to a happy face in Word, while the winking still shows here as a semi-colon and a closing parenthesis before publishing. This is partly notes to me, so I know what the original Word document looked like before I posted it, as well as notes to anyone else who is interested…Ĭontains a happy face, and a winking icon that translate into smileys in WordPress.įirst, I want to see if it interprets smiley faces. What I am going to do is quickly summarize the stuff that I believe is important in this post, to see how it comes through. (Remember that I'm still writing, so I don't even know if this will make it to the blog, although I have some faith it will!) J The End ResultĪll right, I'm not going to tell you what I typed, as you can already see that. So I picked General, Software Reviews, and Office 2007. aha! It had inserted some fields for me to play with under the title! Again… (like anything was going to change, but I like to do stupid things like that sometimes…)įinally, I scrolled back up to the top of the document. I had to clear a login box to the blog, and after that nothing seemed to happen. In the UI, there is a place to select those, so I figured I might as well try that too. Of course, we also have Categories in our blogs. Finally I dropped below the line and started composing my post.As you can imagine, I selected the text above, changed it to Blogging to WordPress from Microsoft Word.Okay, so now that we're done with the setup intermission, I'm dumped into a blank Word document with the following: Click OK a couple of times, and the blog registration is done.I actually ended up going with the default of My Blog Provider, so we'll see if it works. Just to be thorough, I also decided to check the Picture Options. ![]()
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