HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
Word 2007-Headers And Footers For Document Sections
1. Microsoft ® Office Word 2007 Training Headers and footers for document sections Jim Taliaferro Community Mental Health Center
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3. Overview: Documents with different parts Headers and footers for document sections Your Word 2007 document has several parts. How do you apply headers and footers and vary them so they’re appropriate to each part? If your document has a cover page, for example, you may want no page number to show there. And you’d like the headers for each chapter to contain the title for that chapter only. In this course, you’ll see how to tailor your headers and footers to your content.
6. Varying your headers and footers Headers and footers for document sections You have a multipart document, and you want to create headers and footers that go with each part. You already know you can apply a header or footer once and have it appear everywhere. But for the multipart document, you need more control. How do you get that?
7. Create different sections Headers and footers for document sections If your document has several parts, and you want unique headers and footers for each part, you first create section breaks between the document’s parts. A section break enables you to create a unique page layout for the pages in that section. With the unique layout established, you can set up the headers and footers the way you want them for that section.
8. How to create section breaks Headers and footers for document sections You insert section breaks in the main body of the document, not in the header and footer space. So you’d close the header and footer workspace before doing the steps shown in the picture.
9. How to create section breaks Headers and footers for document sections You insert section breaks in the main body of the document, not in the header and footer space. Place the cursor where you want a new section to start. On the Ribbon, click the Page Layout tab, and click Breaks . Under Section Breaks , click Next Page . Word creates a section break before the position of the cursor.
10. How sections are shown in headers and footers Headers and footers for document sections The section break means that what comes before it is one section, and what’s after it is another section. When you open the header and footer workspace, markers appear there that define the sections and keep you oriented.
11. How sections are shown in headers and footers Headers and footers for document sections As the picture shows, the header and footer areas indicate the sections and give each a number. This footer is at the end of section 1. The header below is at the start of section 2. And you’ll notice another tab: Same as Previous .
12. How sections are shown in headers and footers Headers and footers for document sections What does Same as Previous mean? It means that, though you’ve created distinct sections in the document, you still get the option of having header and footer content carry over between sections.
13. Create unique text in a header Headers and footers for document sections To create unique text in a particular header, you first break the link in the header. This frees the header for content that’s unique to the section. First, you place the cursor in the header you want to break the link for. Then, in the Navigation group, click Link to Previous to turn that setting off. Animation: Right-click, and click Play .
14. Create unique text in a header Headers and footers for document sections To create unique text in a particular header, you first break the link in the header. This frees the header for content that’s unique to the section. First, you place the cursor in the header you want to break the link for. Then, in the Navigation group, click Link to Previous to turn that setting off.
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16. Create a different first page Headers and footers for document sections Once you’ve turned your front matter into its own section, you can subdivide it even further, in case you want nothing in the headers and footers on the cover page. Use the Different First Page setting, shown here. Selecting this setting enables the header and footer areas to be different from the rest of the pages in the section. You can do this for any section in the document.
17. Create a different first page Headers and footers for document sections Once you’ve turned your front matter into its own section, you can subdivide it even further, in case you want nothing in the headers and footers on the cover page. The section’s header and footer areas will now have text above them saying “First Page Header” and “First Page Footer.” (This appears only in the header and footer workspace.)
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19. Different odd and even pages Headers and footers for document sections As you use the galleries of designed headers and footers, you’ll see that some are set up for odd and even pages, with the content on the outer edge of the page. To apply headers and footers to odd and even pages, you go through the same process described earlier. That is, you create document sections, break the links between them, and then add the header and footer content that you want in each section.
20. Different odd and even pages Headers and footers for document sections But be sure to note a couple of key points about using this format. If you want the “odd” or “even” headers or footers to sit at the edges of the margin, as for facing pages, you must turn on the Different Odd & Even Pages setting on the Design tab before you apply the headers or footers.
21. Different odd and even pages Headers and footers for document sections But be sure to note a couple of key points about using this format. And this is a document-wide setting. While you can still create unique header and footer content in document sections, you cannot change the odd, even layout.
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Editor's Notes
Before you begin: Students should have a basic familiarity with adding headers and footers to Word 2007 documents. For that, look at the online training presentation titled “Header and footer basics.” [ Notes to trainer : For detailed help in customizing this template, see the last slide. Also, look for additional lesson text in the notes pane of some slides. Adobe Flash animations : This template contains Flash animations. These will play in versions of Microsoft ® Office PowerPoint ® back to PowerPoint 2000. However, if you want to save this template in PowerPoint 2007, save it in the earlier PowerPoint file format: PowerPoint 97-2003 Presentation (*.ppt) or PowerPoint 97-2003 Template (*.pot) . (You’ll see the file types in the Save As dialog box, next to Save as type ). Warning: If you save it in a PowerPoint 2007 file format, such as PowerPoint Presentation (*.pptx) or PowerPoint Template (*.potx) , the animations won’t be retained in the saved file. Also: Because this presentation contains Flash animations, saving the template may cause a warning message to appear regarding personal information. Unless you add information to the properties of the Flash file itself, this warning does not apply to this presentation. Click OK on the message.]