Page formatting in Word 2013 starts with the size of the page, which is normally the size of the paper you’re printing on. Page and paper are similar concepts, but in Word you can do more with a page than just print on it.
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Stack Exchange network consists of 175 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share. It does not stipulate the form, content, or record structure of the data. A variable field may contain one or more data elements or subfields. Character positions 9, 10, 11, 20-23 contain specific fixed values at. Generally, there are four types: planographic print, relief print, intaglio print, and stencil print.
How to set page size
When Word starts out, it assumes that your document is destined to be printed on a sheet of paper and that the paper will be the standard size for your region, such as 8–1/2-by-11 inches in the United States and the A4 size just about everywhere else.
As the computer user, you have every right to disagree with Word and choose a different page size for your document, and you’re not limited to the standard paper sizes, either.
To set the page size, obey these steps:
Your entire document is updated to reflect the new page size, from first page to last. Well, that is, unless you split your document into sections. Then the page size change is reflected only for the current section.
How to set orientation (landscape or portrait)
Word assumes that you want your document’s text to print from left to right on a page that’s taller than it is wide. That’s what it considers normal. It’s also called portrait orientation because the page is presented vertically, like a portrait.
Word can also be told to print longways, or in landscape orientation. To perform this trick, follow these steps:
Word shifts the orientation for every page in your document. This doesn’t mean that the text is sideways, but rather that the text prints wide on a page.
To change the pages back, choose Portrait in Step 3.
How to configure the page margins
Every page has margins. They provide the air around your document — that inch or so of breathing space that sets off the text from the rest of the page. As with other things in Word, these margins can be adjusted, fooled, cajoled, or otherwise obsessed over.
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Word automatically sets page margins at 1 inch from every edge of the page. Most English teachers and book editors want margins of this size because these people love to scribble in margins. In Word, you can adjust the margins to suit any fussy professional.
To change the margins, obey these steps:
The new margins affect all pages in your document — unless you split your document into sections, in which case the changes apply to only the current section.
The choices available on the Margins menu list settings for the top, left, bottom, and right margins. Yes, all four settings are changed at one time. When you want to set specific margins, choose the Custom Margins item from the bottom of the menu. Use the Margins tab in the Page Setup dialog box to set specific margins.
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