The most important thing you can do to a Word 2007 document is save it. Save! Save! Save! Then you can use the saved document again, keep a copy for business reasons, copy it to a CD-R, or e-mail it, for [more…]
When you start your word processing day, Word 2007 automatically presents you with a blank sheet of paper — a blank document — on which you can start writing. That's what most folks do, making this the [more…]
In Word 2007, you can protect your documents from being modified, or changed, by others. The easiest way to protect your document is to use the Protect Document command button. [more…]
Writers and editors can collaborate behind the scenes in Word 2007 with the Track Changes feature. You can track who added what to or who deleted what from a document, and when. Each reviewer is assigned [more…]
Word 2007 offers document protection to allow you to prevent a document from being used or edited in unauthorized ways. For example, say you want someone to review a document but not add to or delete anything [more…]
Starting a new document in Word 2007 is easy. If you’re just starting Word 2007 and want to open a blank document, you can follow three simple steps. [more…]
In Word 2007, you can save your files in the PDF or XPS format. The PDF, or Portable Document Format, pioneered by Adobe and used with its common Acrobat Reader program, is perhaps the most common complex [more…]
You use the standard computer command Open to fetch a document that you previously saved as a file in Word 2007. To grab a file from your disk drive in Word 2007 — to [more…]
When you're done word processing, you can either quit or minimize Word 2007. If don't expect to return to it anytime soon, you may just want to quit the program. If you're merely stopping work on one document [more…]