Tag: bulleted list
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Defining a New List Style

Wondering about the difference between the Define New Multilevel List and Define New List Style commands? List styles can be named, shared, modified, and deleted, unlike multilevel lists. If you use the Define New List Style command when you make changes to the new style, every instance of that style is updated in the document…
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Defining Multilevel Lists

If you need to edit the various levels of a list, you will use the Multilevel List option. Similar to the Bullets and Numbering libraries, multilevel list styles are provided in their own library. If those styles are not what you are looking for, you can create or modify new hierarchical levels of items in…
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Change Level of List Item

Lists, like the Table of Contents, are based on hierarchical outline levels in a tree structure. There are two ways to change levels in a list. One way is to press the Tab key at the beginning of the line until you’ve reached the level down (toward the right) you want or Shift+Tab to move…
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List Libraries and Defining a New List

You’re making a list and for whatever reason you don’t like the default appearance. I’m not talking fonts and colors rather the bullet or the numbering. If you need suggestions or want to set a specific list style, go to the Home ribbon in the Paragraph group, access either the Bullet or Numbering Library and…
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Stop Automatic Numbering

You likely already know how easy it is to add bullets or numbers to existing lines of text. Word can automatically create lists as you type. By default, if you start a paragraph with an asterisk, the number “1,” or the letter “a” followed by a period and either a tab or space, Word recognizes…
