fogege045
04-11-2011, 07:44 PM
Word has gridlines in tables,Microsoft Office 2010 Home And Business (http://www.office2010key.ca/), gridlines on a page, and a page boundary. We'll cover all three. Gridlines in a table Here's what a table looks like without the gridlines showing: To see the gridlines in a table,Microsoft Office Home And Business 2010 (http://www.key-office-2010.de/), click the table. Click the Layout tab under Table Tools. In the Table group,Windows 7 Activation Key (http://www.windows7key.ca/), click View Gridlines. Here's what the table looks like with the gridlines showing: Gridlines on a page Click the View tab. In the Show group, select the Gridlines check box. Here's what the page looks like with gridlines showing: Page boundaries (or text boundaries) If you just want to see a dotted line where your page margins are, you can show the text boundary. Click the File tab. Click Options,Cheap Office 2007 (http://www.microsoftoffice2007key.net), and then click Advanced. Scroll down to the Show document content area,Windows 7 Home Premium Key (http://www.windows7serialkey.net/), and then select the Show text boundaries check box. Here's what the page looks like with text boundaries showing: I hope this helps you stay on the grid in Word. -- Joannie Stangeland <div