Computer Science, asked by Sana7680, 9 months ago

Three features of the following
a)margins tab
b) paper tab
c) layout tab

Answers

Answered by aakritisingh21sep201
1

Answer:

Explanation:

YOUR DOCUMENT MAKES A FIRST IMPRESSION before anyone reads a word. The paper size, color, and borders give the reader an overall sense of the document’s theme and quality. Margins, the text layout, and perhaps a watermark send further visual clues. Making the right choices about your document setup helps you send the right message to your readers. Say you’re working on an invitation; using a smaller, elegant paper size and adding a subtle border lets your recipients know right away that they’re in for a sophisticated event.

In this chapter, you’ll learn how to set and change all the page layout features that people notice first, starting with paper size, orientation, and margins. You’ll also learn how to adjust margins and make changes to the headers and footers. Finally, you’ll learn how to work with multiple columns and how to control Word’s hyphenation inclinations.

Choosing Paper Size and Layout

When you edit a document in Word, what you see on your computer screen looks almost exactly like the final printed page. To get that correct preview, Word needs to know some details about the paper you’re using, like the page size and orientation. You have two different ways to change the page settings: using the Page Layout tab (Figure 4-1) or the Page Setup dialog box (Figure 4-2). When you click the Page Layout tab, the ribbon’s buttons and icons change to show you options related to designing your page as a whole. Your options are organized in five groups: Themes, Page Setup, Page Background, Paragraph, and Arrange.

The Size menu, like many Word 2007 menus, uses icons as well as text to give you quick visual cues. Your choices include Letter (8.5” × 11”), Tabloid (11” × 17”), and more. If you’re using standard-size paper (including standard international sizes like A3 and A4), you can click one of these choices, and you’re done.

Figure 4-1. The Size menu, like many Word 2007 menus, uses icons as well as text to give you quick visual cues. Your choices include Letter (8.5” × 11”), Tabloid (11” × 17”), and more. If you’re using standard-size paper (including standard international sizes like A3 and A4), you can click one of these choices, and you’re done.

UP TO SPEED: OF MENUS AND BOXES

Word gives you two ways to set options: through ribbon menus and dialog boxes. In general, the ribbon’s drop-down menus give you access to quick, predesigned solutions, while dialog boxes give you greater control over more details. Menu options usually focus on one or two settings, while dialog boxes are much more complex affairs, letting you change several settings at once.

The Page Layout → Page Setup → Size menu, shown in Figure 4-1, lets you choose a standard paper size with one click. But what if you’re not using one of the standard paper sizes on the Size menu? In that case, click More Paper Sizes (at the bottom of the Size menu).

The Page Setup dialog box opens to the Paper tab (Figure 4-2). Here, you can customize the page size—by entering numbers in the Width and Height text boxes—and tweak other paper-related settings. These other settings, such as the Paper Source settings (which let you tell your printer which tray to take the paper from), are typical of the fine-tuning controls you find in dialog boxes.

On the Margins and Layout tabs, you can control your document’s margins, orientation, headers, and footers. You’ll learn more about all of these settings later in this chapter.

Customizing paper size and source

If you can’t find the paper size you need on the Size menu, then you need to customize your paper size, which you do in the Page Setup dialog box’s Paper tab. Here are the steps:

Choose Page Layout → Page Setup → Size. At the bottom of the Size menu, click More Paper Sizes.

The Page Setup dialog box appears, with the Paper tab showing (Figure 4-2). Why the Paper tab? Because you opened the box using the More Paper Sizes button.

In the Width and Height boxes, enter the size of your custom paper.

The quickest way to change the Width and Height settings is to select the numbers in the boxes and type your new page dimensions. Your new numbers replace the previous settings. You can also click the up and down arrows to the right of the text boxes, but it’s slow going as the sizes change in tenths of an inch. Notice that as you change the dimensions, the Preview image at the bottom of the Page Setup box changes to match.

Click OK at the bottom, to close the dialog box and make the changes.

The Page Setup box closes, and your custom-sized document shows in Word.

Using the Paper tab of the Page Setup box, you can choose from standard paper sizes or set your own custom paper size. Dialog boxes are great for making several changes at once. On this tab you can also choose a paper source (if you’re lucky enough to have a printer with more than one paper tray). You can read more about printing in Chapter 7.

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