The Atlanta Lawyer March 2018 | Page 27

text with selected formatting and select the default of the top half of the paste button. Generally, you should always choose to strip formatting when pasting text from one document to another. Bringing the formatting in from the source document will almost always cause formatting issues in the receiving document. Word Tip #3 Learn to Use Styles Most Word users do not under- stand, appreciate or utilize styles which are found in the center of the home ribbon in Word 2013/2016. Built-in styles are combinations of formatting char- acteristics that can be applied to text to quickly change its appear- ance. For example, applying the heading 1 style might make text bold, Arial, and 16-point, and ap- plying the heading 2 style might make text bold italic, Arial, and 14-point. (Those are examples; exact formatting characteristics depend on Word's default settings and those you might have chosen for yourself). 2 Benefits of Word style usage in- clude: 1. Automatic creation of a table of contents that can be dynami- cally updated as you modify your document; 2. Styles applied throughout your document will consistently change if you modify the style itself on the styles toolbar or style menu. 3. Styles are easily converted to PDF bookmarks when converted from a Word document to PDF, making the PDF easier to navigate; 4. You can lock down styles in a document to make sure that others don’t apply direct formatting and change your document. 5. Style usage throughout your firm ensures consistency of out- put. An example would be the cre- ation of a letterhead template or a pleadings template for the court system you generally file with. Set the styles properly and the output will be the same for every letter and/or pleading created. Word Tip #4 Learn to Use Section Breaks Dividing a document into sections lets you customize formats for a section's content and purpose. For instance, you might want a single page to be in landscape in the middle of a portrait document. Or, you might want the header text or page numbering scheme to change for several pages. Using sections, you can apply different formatting as needed. When used with styles and other layouts (see the layout ribbon), you can control formatting of differ- ent areas of your document. For example, suppose you are writing a memo to a court and want to in- sert a table of data from Microsoft Excel to show damages calcula- tions. You may want to have the table display in landscape mode to allow for the expansion of the data table. If you paste the table in from Excel directly, without first creating a section break and formatting the pages within the new section to landscape, you’ll likely end up fighting with Word. Section breaks also permit you to change the appearances of things like cover pages, tables of contents pages, index pages, and the like. Section breaks are found on the layout tab. Word Tip # 5 And You Thought You Couldn’t Reveal Codes in Word Many users continue to cling to Corel Word Perfect (no disrespect to the good people at Corel) be- cause they claim Word doesn’t have a reveal codes feature. And, while Word doesn’t have a reveal codes editor, Word’s answer to this dilemma is to determine what for- matting is applied to a paragraph. To see what formatting is applied to text in your document, place your cursor in the text and select Shift + F1. This will open the reveal formatting pane on the right side of your screen. As you will see, it breaks down the formatting into font, paragraph and section, ex- plains what is being applied and allows you to adjust formatting by clicking any of the hyperlinks (underlined items) that appear. Microsoft Outlook Just about every lawyer uses Out- look. Outlook is a great personal information manager included in most Office 365/Microsoft Of- fice suites. Like with Word, many times we only use a fraction of the features available in Outlook. Below are five tips for Outlook, primarily from 2013-2016. The Official News Publication of the Atlanta Bar Association THE ATLANTA LAWYER 27