By using Word's "positioning" feature, you can quickly move your cursor to a location specified in the current document, typically to drastically cross or look for special objects in your document. Action steps are as follows:
1. Perform "edit" → "position" (or press ctrl+g, or press F5) to open the Locate tab of the Find and Replace dialog box.
2. A target that can be used directly for positioning is displayed in the list box under "targeting." By default, Word suggests positioning by page. Select a different target, and the prompt text on the right text box will change. This example selects the positioning target as "table".
3. If you know the ordinal number of the table you want to locate in the document, you can enter the number directly in the text box. Prefix a number with a "+", "-" sign, indicating that several tables are moved down or up by the current table. You can also click Next, previous in order to view.
4. Close the dialog box by clicking the Close button (or pressing ESC) when the position is completed, and the cursor is positioned at the target.
Tips:
In the lower part of the scroll bar of the window, there is a circular "Select Browse Object" button, a single hit list, you can set different reference objects to browse the document, after setting, click the double arrow button above and below the round button to browse the previous and next anchored object. Click the → button to open the Locate dialog box.
The specific operation of the animation demo process is as follows: Do not see clearly click the animation zoom.
Back to Word Getting Started Tutorial catalog page