Microsoft Word is a behemoth of an application. There is a lot you can do, and there are lots of ways to do things. Here are a few tips for various tasks relating to keyboard shortcuts in Microsoft Word. These tips were created using Microsoft Word 2003, but should work with any version.
Get a List of All Word Keyboard Shortcuts
WARNING: The resulting document of all keyboard shortcuts is immense.
- Access the Macros dialog with Alt-F8
- In the Macros In combo box, select the Word Commands option
- In the Macro name edit box, type in: ListCommands
- Press Enter
- In the resulting dialog, select the radio button titled "All Word Comands"
- Press Enter
Change Any Keyboard Shortcut
All of the Microsoft Word commands are listed in a single dialog that lets you add or modify shortcuts.
- Press Alt-T for Tools
- Press C for Customize
- Press Alt-C to select the Commands tab control
- Press Alt-K to open the Customize Keyboard dialog
- Select the category you're interested in
- Tab to the Commands list box
- Select the command you're interested in
- Press Alt-N to focus the shortcut key edit box
- Press the key combination you want to use for the selected command
- Press Alt-A to assign the shortcut to the selected command
- Repeat as desired
Create Keyboard Shortcuts Using the Mouse
The last tip is probably one of the more nifty things Word has to offer. Say that you want to create a shortcut for the strikethrough command, but you don't want to have to weed through all available commands to find it. Here's a quick way to assign a shortcut to the strikethrough function.
- Press Control-D to open the Font dialog
- Press Control-Alt-Numpad-Plus. At this point, the mouse pointer will become a small clover icon.
- Using the Window-Eyes mouse keys, navigate to the Strikethrough check box. Alternatively, tab to the Strikethrough check box, then press Insert-Numpad-Plus to route the mouse to the control
- Left click, with Numpad-Slash, the Strikethrough check box
- Press the key combination you want to use for the selected command
- Press Alt-A to assign the shortcut to the selected command
- Tab to the Close button and press Enter
Now you can use the shortcut you assigned to apply the strikethrough attribute to any text you select.
How cool is that?
I know yu can start the macro recorder, and Word would then generate macro commands from anything you do, including mouse click choices, but I don't see anything in the example instructions which "kicks off" the Word process for assigning a keyboard command.
thanks.
Thank you.