Word Merges Blank and Non-Blank Table Cells Differently |
Q106254
Word version 6.0 for Windows merges non-blank and blank table cells differently. Previous versions of Word do not handle them differently.
By design in Word 6.0, if a table cell is blank, Word does not add a paragraph mark to the merged cell. By contrast, if a table cell contains text, Word does add a paragraph mark to the merged cell. For example, if you merge these blank table cells,
__________________________________________
|o |o |o |
------------------------------------------
(Note: The "o" represents an end-of-cell marker, not actual text.)
__________________________________________
|o |
------------------------------------------
(Note: The "o" represents an end-of-cell marker, not actual text.)
__________________________________________
|TEXT o |o |o |
------------------------------------------
(Note: The "o" represents an end-of-cell marker, not actual text.)
__________________________________________
|TEXT P |
|o |
------------------------------------------
(Note: The "P" is the paragraph mark, not actual text. The "o"
represents an end-of-cell marker, not actual text.)
Previous versions of Word insert a paragraph mark for each blank table cell you merge, which creates one line for each cell you merge. For example, if you merge these blank table cells,
__________________________________________
|o |o |o |
------------------------------------------
(Note: The "o" represents an end-of-cell marker, not actual text.)
__________________________________________
|P |
|P |
|o |
------------------------------------------
(Note: The "P" is the paragraph mark, not actual text. The "o"
represents an end-of-cell marker, not actual text.)
"Microsoft Word User's Guide," version 6.0, Chapter 13, "Working With Tables," "Merging and Splitting Cells" topic
Additional query words: 6.0 winword word6
Keywords : kbtable
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Last Reviewed: November 4, 2000 © 2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |