10 Hidden Features in Microsoft Word (You’ll Wish You Knew Sooner)

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Get ready, because after this video,  you'll be able to update your resume   that you are advanced in Microsoft Word  skills, and also be able to impress all   your friends or coworkers. I'm going to show  you 10 features in Word that are secret or   otherwise hidden away deep in the settings  that you'll probably wish you knew sooner. And I also have seven other cool features  that are hidden in plain sight, you could say,   that are not really hidden, but a lot of people  for some reason don't know about them. So let's   just jump into it. And if you end up enjoying  this video, be sure to give it a big thumbs up   for my YouTube algorithm overlords, and  also consider subscribing because I'll   probably end up making more videos about hidden  features in other Office programs like Excel. Starting off, we have the secret lorem ipsum and  random generator commands. In a Word document,   if you type equals, rand, and then parentheses, it  will generate a few random sentences of text. And   if you type in equals lorem and then parentheses,  it will generate a bunch of lorem ipsum text,   which if you're not familiar, it's basically  just gibberish Latin text used as a placeholder. For both of these, you can actually  customize how much text. So if you   put three comma five in the parentheses, for  example, it will generate three paragraphs   of five sentences each. And for both,  you just hit enter after typing it and   it'll generate. Next we have a literally  hidden feature, which is hidden text. To use this feature, you just select any  amount of text and then press Ctrl+D,   which will bring up the font menu, and then you  check the hidden box and hit okay. And that will   hide the text. Now this text and any other hidden  text will only show up if you click the Show/Hide   toggle button in the paragraph tools group in the  ribbon, but I'll talk more about that tool later. Alright anyway, moving on we  have a feature called spike,   which lets you cut multiple sections of  text separately and then paste them all   together at once. So what you do is highlight  some text and then press Ctrl+F3 or Cmd+F3 on   a Mac and do this however many times you need.  And then when you want to go paste something,   you press Ctrl+Shift+F3 and then it will  simply paste all those things at once. Next up, we have vertical text selection. So  you can do this by holding the Alt key and   then clicking and dragging to select something.  And it basically selects in a square shape. So   I usually find this useful if I'm pasting  text that has a weird format for example,   that I want to get rid of. Like maybe  here I copy and pasted this list that   has indents before everything  and I want to get rid of it. So instead of having to go through each one  and deleting the tab, I can just Alt+Click   and select all the space on the left and  hit delete at once. For this next one,   it's kind of two in one, starting with a feature  called Shrink One Page. This feature will adjust   the font size and margins of the content of  the document so that it fits onto fewer pages. Really it should be called shrink  by one page because that's what it   tries to do. If you have three pages,  it'll try to reduce it down to two,   but it can be pretty finicky. Sometimes  it just says it's unable to do it,   but then it will if you select some amount of  text or all of it, it seems kind of random. So you kind of have to try multiple things. I  definitely would not want to use this feature   on a document where I've spent some time  carefully formatting it a certain way   because it will adjust the formatting of the  whole document. So you might only want to use   it in specific circumstances. Now, this feature  by default will not actually show up in the top   ribbon of commands, but you can actually  add tabs and groups of custom commands. So that's kind of the second tip  here, so it's two for one. To do this,   right click on the ribbon at the top and then  hit "Customize the Ribbon." On the right,   you'll want to hit "New Tab" and you can  rename it whatever you want, like "custom",   and you can also rename the group as well.  And you'll see what this does in a second. Make sure the custom group you just made is  selected and then look at the left-hand box   and in the dropdown, click "All Commands."  Then just look through the list until you   find Shrink One Page, it's a pretty long list,  and select that and hit Add and then hit okay,   after it gets added to the group. Or you  can add multiple commands if you want. Now you'll see this command showed up in  this new custom tab or whatever you called   it. And you can also create multiple  groups within that tab. Alternatively,   you can also go to the quick access toolbar  menu and again, do the same thing. Look for   shrink one Page and then hit Add. Then right click  on the ribbon and hit show "Quick Access Toolbar." By default, I believe it  will show below the ribbon,   or you can hit the little dropdown and  hit "Show Above Ribbon" and it will show   the commands above near the save icon. And  you can also put other commands there too,   whichever you prefer. Moving on, the next  feature is the Document Inspector. You   can get this by going to File and then Info and  click "Check for Issues" and "Inspect Document." This basically lets you check  the document for additional data   and properties like comments,  author or personal metadata,   invisible or hidden contents and more. If  it finds any of the things you selected,   it will tell you which of those it did. And you  have the option to hit "Remove All to remove that. This could come in handy, for example,  if you're working on a final version of a   document that you're going to be distributing  to people and you want to make sure that none   of the comments you and your colleagues were  working on are still in there. Or maybe you   don't want your personal info and author being  listed in the properties, stuff like that. You can make sure it's just a clean document  and only leaves in what you want. Next we   have advanced autocorrect options. You can get  to this by going to File, Options, Proofing,   and then Autocorrect Options. And you can  customize everything about how autocorrect   works in here. It's probably better if you just  look through this yourself, there's a lot. But   you can do stuff like setting custom word  replacement rules or changing existing ones. But I think the coolest feature I want to focus  on here is this Actions tab, and you can enable   additional actions. What this does is lets you  select certain types of text that's enabled,   and do stuff with it. For example, the Measurement  Converter, if you highlight some text like 5   pounds and then right click, you'll see Additional  Actions and you can convert it to kilograms. So you can also do the same thing for  miles or whatever else. Very cool. Next,   you might have known that you  can customize the ribbon before,   but did you know that you can customize that  bottom status bar as well? If you right click it,   you can now see a whole bunch of options for what  it will show. So maybe in addition to word count,   you always want to be able to  see the character count as well. Or maybe the line numbers or selections of  whatever's selected or where the cursor is. A   bunch of different stuff you can see here. And  moving on, we have the Advanced Find feature.   So you probably already know you can press  Ctrl+F and that brings up the find or search   menu. But you can also click the drop down  next to the search box and hit Advanced Find. And even if you already knew about this, you  might not know exactly how powerful it is.   You'll see there's a bunch of additional options  for doing searches. You can match the case,   whole words, wildcards, stuff  like that. But at the bottom,   you can also click special to search  for special characters or content. So clicking tab inserts the special  code to search for a tab character   or other wildcards like any character or  any digit. Like maybe you're searching for   something with a specific format, like  any instance of three digit numbers.   You can put the "Any Digit" special thing  three times, and it will find those. You can even have it search for content  with a specific font, font color, font size,   that sort of thing, or even a specific language.  You have so many different options here that you   can see and look through yourself. And also  you can see there's another tab that lets you   search and replace text using basically the same  search parameters that you had in the find tab. So could definitely come in handy. Okay  so that's all of the hidden features,   but now we can get into the lesser-known  features that are pretty much right there   in the ribbon. But I know a lot of people  maybe never bothered to look at what they did,   or just never noticed them. The first one I  can show you is the Add Screenshot feature. And you can find this by going to the Insert  tab and then clicking Screenshot. This lets   you automatically screenshot any other  open window from another program and add   that screenshot in one click. Just click  the thumbnail of whatever window and it   will automatically do the rest. Or you can  click Screen Clipping and that will minimize   Word and then let you click and drag to make a  screenshot selection and add it the same way. Next up is the Change Case feature. You  can use this by highlighting any text and   then clicking this button in the Home tab.  And with this, you can automatically change   the case of the text in a few ways,  like converting it to all uppercase,   lowercase, reversing it with the toggle  case, and more that you can see here. If you've ever done this before  with text manually by retyping it,   you'll probably wish you knew about that.  Next up we have the Read Aloud feature,   which you can find in the Review tab, and  then Read Aloud. This will simply read any   text starting at the cursor, or any selected  text. And you can stop it by pressing it again. So this is pretty simple, and it's good if you  want to maybe hear if some written text sounds   natural when spoken. Next up we have the Show/Hide  formatting symbols button. And we already saw how   this lets you see hidden text, but it also shows  other formatting symbols, such as the paragraph   symbol for new lines, or a dot for any spaces,  also any page breaks, tabs, that sort of thing. Also if you want any of these special  symbols to show up all the time,   you can actually go into the options and then  Display section, and select which ones you   want. And that will show them all the time,  not just when you toggle it. Next up we have   the Compare Documents feature, which you can  find in the review tab, and then click Compare. And then it'll have you select the  original and revised documents. On   the left it'll show you all the revisions,  like what was added or deleted. And then   it'll also show you in this main section, the  changes in red. And on the right hand side,   as you scroll, it'll also show the  versions of both without any changes. So you can kind of quickly see anything you want.  Alright now this next feature is really powerful,   and it's called Quick Parts. This feature lets you  save reusable content, like text snippets, logos,   headers, whatever, so you can easily access them  and reuse them. To do so, just select anything,   and then go to the Insert tab, click Quick Parts,  and then "Save Selection to Quick Parts Gallery." It'll bring up this Building Blocks window  to organize it and change some settings.   I'll explain that next, but for now you  probably just want to change the name.   And then the next time you click Quick Parts,  it will show you the things you've saved to   quickly insert. So it'll show kind of like a  thumbnail, and the name that you set before. And when you click it, it simply inserts it.  And you can do this with text, images, graphics,   whatever. And like you might have seen in that  one window, you can actually add more categories   when saving something, and they'll be grouped  together. So like here, I can make one for images   or whatever, and now there's the general group  that was the default, and the images one too. Now Quick Parts is actually part of a larger  group of features called Building Blocks,   which you may have noticed in that  window that popped up. Building   Blocks are basically pre-designed  elements for use in documents. And   they actually include features that  you're probably already familiar with,   such as pre-made headers and footers, pre-made  page number layouts, and even text box styles. And just like Quick Parts, you could for  example customize a text box in some way,   like adding a red border. And then you can select  it and go to "Text Box" > "Save Selection to   Text Box Gallery," and it brings up the same  Building Blocks window. Then after you save it,   the next time you'll see an additional group  within the text boxes with styles that you added. And the same goes with every other  type of Building Block which I'll   list here. And you can actually  see all the Building Blocks by   hitting "Quick Parts" > "Building Blocks  Organizer". The window is obnoxiously small,   but it lists all the Building Blocks, and you  can see that the type is in the Gallery column. So we have the headers and footers, stuff  like that. So you can just look through   them all. And if you ever [click] to  Edit a Building Block or Quick Part,   it'll bring up this same menu. So it's  probably good that you know what this is.   So hopefully you found this video pretty  cool. Let me know down in the comments if   you didn't know about any of these, or maybe  you're super smart and knew about them all. Also if I missed anything big, be sure to let  me know down in the comments and also check   down there because maybe someone mentioned one  that I didn't. Again, be sure to give the video   a big giant thumbs up for the YouTube algorithm  if you enjoyed it. And if you want to subscribe,   I try to make videos about twice a week, usually  Wednesday and Saturday, so it should be worth it. If you want to keep watching, the next video  I'd recommend is where I was talking about a   whole bunch of hidden Chrome menus with  cool features. And it also applies for   other Chromium browsers like Microsoft Edge,  Brave Browser, that sort of thing. So hopefully   you enjoyed this video. Thanks so much for  watching, and I'll see you in the next one.
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Channel: ThioJoe
Views: 182,181
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Id: MWw7YI_3Pf4
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Length: 12min 21sec (741 seconds)
Published: Sat Apr 29 2023
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