Remove Customized Workspace Microsoft Word Mac

Dealing with blank pages can be tricky for newcomers to Microsoft Word. Many people familiar with the word processing software take some of its more obvious features for granted. If they were asked how to delete a page in Word 2010, they’d probably say, “It’s easy, just delete it!” For a.

Dealing with blank pages can be tricky for newcomers to Microsoft Word. Many people familiar with the word processing software take some of its more obvious features for granted. If they were asked how to delete a page in Word 2010, they’d probably say, “It’s easy, just delete it!”

Word

For a newbie, it isn’t exactly that easy, and if you want to get technical, it isn’t even correct. No page in Microsoft Word is actually blank; if it was, you wouldn’t be able to see it.

In this guide, we’ll assume a limited knowledge of Microsoft Word, and teach you exactly how to delete a page in Word 2010, from start to finish. Are you a beginner looking for a little extra guidance? Check out this Word 2010 Beginner’s course to get started!

How to Delete a Page

Let’s say after a long day of revising a draft, copying, pasting, and rearranging information, you end up with a few pages in your document worth scrapping. But how do you delete a page in the middle of your document?

Highlight and Delete

If you don’t have any fancy formatting in your document, you could manually highlight the contents of that page and use either the Backspace button or Delete button to erase the text on the page you want to get rid of.

You can also do this by highlighting the text you want to delete, right clicking on the highlighted portion, and selecting Cut from the context menu that appears.

Go To and Delete

If highlighting the text on a specific page is difficult for you – for instance, if you’re using a track pad or are just having trouble clicking and dragging to highlight the right content – you can easily select the contents of a single page by using the Go To function.

Start by clicking anywhere on the page you want to delete, then find the Go To function by navigating to the upper right of the screen. You should see a small pair of binoculars with the word Find next to it.

Click on the small, down-pointing arrow to open up a drop-down menu. Don’t click Find, because this will only trigger the Find function. When the drop-down menu is open, click on the last option in the list: Go To. You can also press Ctrl+G.

The following prompt will appear:

In the Go To tab, where it says “Enter page number,” type in page into the text field, taking care to use a backslash “” and not a forward-facing slash “/” otherwise it won’t work.

Click the Go To button, and the page you initially placed your cursor in should be highlighted completely.

Now, you can delete the highlighted text using the methods described before – Backspace, Delete, or right-click and Cut.

Go To and Delete For Multiple Pages

Sometimes, you might be stuck with multiple pages you want to get rid of, all in the middle of your document. Since clicking and dragging through a large document, trying to highlight multiple page’s worth of text can be a hassle, we can use the Go To function explained above to do it for us.

Remove Customized Workspace Microsoft Word Mac Download

In our example document, we want to get rid of pages 3-7.

Hit F5 hotkey to bring up the Go To function. It doesn’t matter what page you have selected already when you bring it up this time, but you do need to know which pages you want to delete.

Still having trouble finding Go To? Learn your way around Word 2010 here!

When it asks you to enter a page number, enter the first page that you want deleted. In our example, that’s page 3, so we enter 3 in the text field.

Then press Enter.

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You should see page 3 has been selected. Next, press the F8 hotkey. This is used to extend a selection, which you’ll understand after this next step.

Press F5 again to bring up the Go To function. You might think you need to enter 7 into the text field to select that page, but because the Go To function selects up to the very beginning of a page, it won’t actually fully select the page you enter next.

So we want to enter page 8 instead, and press Enter.

Customized Product

You’ll see pages 3-7 have been highlighted, and are ready for deletion!

Deleting Paragraph Markers

Let’s say you have a 9 page document that’s actually 10 pages because of a pesky blank page hanging out at the end. You could use the same methods to get rid of it listed above, or you could learn how to activate paragraph markers!

In the Home tab at the top of the screen, in the Paragraph section, you’ll see an icon for a paragraph marker. Click on it, or press Ctrl+Shift+8, or Ctrl+* to activate it.

You’ll notice a bunch of weird symbols have appeared in your document. These are formatting markers. They’re typically invisible, for obvious reasons: they clutter up your page and make it really inconvenient to write.

Don’t worry, you can turn them back off again, but for now we need them to figure out what’s going on with that “blank” page. As you can see on the left, our “blank” page isn’t actually blank at all. It’s full of paragraph markers, meaning there’s a lot of line breaks creating empty space in that page… five blank paragraphs, to be exact.

Line breaks occur when you press Enter in a Word document to skip to a new line and continue writing. Microsoft Word counts these lines as content, even if you can’t normally see them. That’s what the formatting markers are for. All you need to do here is highlight the paragraph markers the same way we learned to highlight any kind of text, and delete it. This will get rid of the empty paragraphs causing that “blank” page to stick around!

If you’re new to Microsoft Word, and found a lot of this went over your head, consider taking some entry-level courses!

View some comprehensive MS Word 2010 tutorials here, or consider a bundled course with PowerPoint, another valuable program.

When you choose the Add to Dictionary command in Word 2013, the given word is placed into the custom dictionary. Recognizing that people may change their minds, Word allows you to edit its custom dictionary, to remove words you may have added accidentally.

To remove unwanted words from the custom dictionary, follow these steps:

1Click the Word Options button on the File tab’s menu.

The Word Options window shows up.

2Choose Proofing.

This will appear on the left side of the window.

3Click the button labeled Custom Dictionaries.

The Custom Dictionaries dialog box appears.

4Select the item RoamingCustom.dic (Default).

It’s probably the only item in the list.

5Click the button labeled Edit Word List.

You see a scrolling list of words you’ve added to the custom dictionary.

6Find and select the word you want to remove from the dictionary.

The word is selected by clicking it once.

7Click the Delete button.

This will remove the word.

8Repeat Steps above if you want to remove more words.

This is an optional step.

9Click the OK button when you're done editing the dictionary.

Close any other open windows.