On Thursday, November 7, 2013 2:15:05 PM UTC-5, Stefan Blom wrote:
Thanks again.
I tried the arrow technique and while it worked as you described, I am curious by what I saw. Please explain what Word is doing...
I opened a new Word 2010 document. With the cursor on Page 1, Position 1, I pressed Ctrl-End, Ctrl-Enter to insert a new page. I then used the back arrow as suggested and the cursor landed at a spot 2' beyond Page 1, Position 1.
So here's my question...I hope this makes sense.
The cursor did not move when I pressed Ctrl-End and then moved to Page 2 Position 1 when I hit Ctrl-Enter. I assume that means that Ctrl-Enter 'added' something to Page 1 which causes the cursor to land beyond the original end of the document when the back arrow is used.
Further, if the cursor is at Page 2 Position 1 after Ctrl-Enter, pressing backspace once does nothing visible, while pressing backspace twice deletes Page 2. However, as I mentioned, pressing the back arrow moves the cursor to the 2' spot on Page 1. Pressing backspace at that point deletes Page 2.
So what is happening in that 2' space on Page 1 that the back arrow key recognizes it but the backspace key (sort of) doesn't?
Thanks again.
I tried the arrow technique and while it worked as you described, I am curious by what I saw. Please explain what Word is doing...
I opened a new Word 2010 document. With the cursor on Page 1, Position 1, I pressed Ctrl-End, Ctrl-Enter to insert a new page. I then used the back arrow as suggested and the cursor landed at a spot 2' beyond Page 1, Position 1.
So here's my question...I hope this makes sense.
The cursor did not move when I pressed Ctrl-End and then moved to Page 2 Position 1 when I hit Ctrl-Enter. I assume that means that Ctrl-Enter 'added' something to Page 1 which causes the cursor to land beyond the original end of the document when the back arrow is used.
Further, if the cursor is at Page 2 Position 1 after Ctrl-Enter, pressing backspace once does nothing visible, while pressing backspace twice deletes Page 2. However, as I mentioned, pressing the back arrow moves the cursor to the 2' spot on Page 1. Pressing backspace at that point deletes Page 2.
So what is happening in that 2' space on Page 1 that the back arrow key recognizes it but the backspace key (sort of) doesn't?
How To Add Another Page In Wordpad
Click at the bottom or end of the page that precedes the new page you wish to add. If any words or pages follow the place where your cursor blinks, then Word will move them to begin after the new page. Step 2 Click the 'Insert' tab in the the toolbar at the top of Word. Select between the intro and the body of the document and go to Layout Breaks Next Page. Tip: To see section breaks and other formatting marks, go to Home and select Show/Hide (ΒΆ) to turn on the display of formatting marks. In the header for the body section, deselect Link to Previous.