It is then a real pain to put them in the right place using text boxes etc. ![]() ![]() The text will rotate (rather than the page) – this means that the page numbers will stay in the same position (one of the unfortunate hazards of the other method, is that the page numbers end up relative to the new page orientation – i.e.Select “Text Direction” and choose “Rotate all text 270º (or 90º if you prefer).Click on the + handle on the top LH corner of the resulting text box.Click on the Insert menu, and select “text Box” – this will put a text box around the selected text.Select the “table” (scare quotes are vital here: I mean “tabulated text” not a “table” in the sense of a grid with data in it).If you have tabulated data (rather than a “table”) you can try this: In this particular case, the table had been created with tab stops rather than a table grid, which meant there was a nice workaround. To be honest, I don’t know what the problem is, and I have no idea whether it’s all versions of Word, all tables, all documents or whatever, but be warned. I’ve checked this and looked on a number of forums, and sadly, it seems that this may be an intractable problem with Word and page orientation changes. Once you’ve finished, go back to View>Print layout)Ī recent visitor to this page has pointed out that when she tries to print the resulting document, the page immediately after the landscape page has its margins corrupted, and is shifted 2.5 inches to the right, and bleeds off the page. This will allow you to see where the section breaks are. To avoid deleting section breaks accidentally, put the document temporarily in to outline view ( View>Outline).If this happens, scream and press ‘Undo’ (CTRL+Z or ⌘Z) If you’re not careful, you can backspace over the section break and put your landscape page back into portrait, or vice versa. ![]()
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