Imagine, for instance, that you've got a text file, and headings are marked up by having 3 empty paragraphs before them and an empty paragraph after. ![]() Text that has to be formatted in the second, you format them (and remove the tags).įind what: (something)(something else)(another string)Īnd then remove the tags and apply the formatting in a second replace: Use Microsoft Words 'Show/Hide ¶' button to show all your line breaks If youre formatting something trickier than basic paragraphs, like a resume, the '¶' symbol is your friend. In a find/replace, you can only change the formatting of the whole find-text so you would need to do two find-replaces to get the job done. ![]() I found a nice article about wildcards, and it has a ton of useful information, but what is relevant to your question is this:Ī nice trick if you want to apply formatting to a part (but not all) of the search text is to put in “tags ” in
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |