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More On MS Office

More On MS Office

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WARNING: Using Tips n Tricks on this website incorrectly can cause serious problems that may require you to reinstall Operating System. We cannot guarantee that problems resulting from the incorrect use of Tips and Tricks can be solved. Use Tips and Tricks at your own risk.

Microsoft Office shortcuts on your keyboard
1.  Ctrl Z is the magic undo combo. It simply undoes your last action, say, the paragraph you accidentally erased (it works in other applications, too--try it on the Photoshop filter you really wish you hadn't applied, or after renaming a document or a folder in a Windows directory). Programs vary in the number of times you can undo something, but some will let you Ctrl Z all the way back to the beginning. (And, yes, there is a redo command, just hit Ctrl Y.)
2.  Ctrl B, Ctrl I, or Ctrl U apply bold, italics, or underline to highlighted text, respectively.
3.  Ctrl P prints whatever is in an active window.
4.  Ctrl Backspace erases an entire word at a time, instead of a letter. Ctrl up or down arrows let you scroll an entire paragraph at a time, instead of one line, and Ctrl Shift up or down arrow will select an entire paragraph.
5.  Ctrl Enter inserts a page break in Word.
6.  Alt Ctrl C inserts the copyright symbol (Alt Ctrl R inserts the registered trademark symbol, and Alt Ctrl T makes the trademark symbol)
7.  In Outlook, you can jump to the section you want: Ctrl 1 switches to the Mail window, Ctrl 2 switches to the Calender, Ctrl 3 to Contacts, Ctrl 4 to Tasks, and Ctrl 5 to Notes.
8.  Ctrl Shift M starts a new message in Outlook. (Use Ctrl Shift C for a new contact.)
9.  In Outlook e-mail, hit Ctrl N to compose a new message, Ctrl R to reply to a message.
10.The only Excel shortcut I've ever known, Ctrl , enters the date. (If you live in Excel, you should have the Excel Keyboard Shortcuts page in your Favorites!

Speed up searches in Outlook

Searching in Outlook is like a bad dream--the one where you're trying to run and your feet keep moving, but you get nowhere. As one sufferer puts it, "Whenever I try to search for messages in Outlook, the dreaded hourglass pops up, and I stare at it for minutes at a time--that is, if the blasted program doesn't crash altogether. What's the point of having a search feature if it takes so long?"

While Outlook gets a makeover and new features with every Office update, its sluggish search engine hasn't changed much since its childhood. Outlook still physically scans each of your messages when you search. This is fine if you have only a few dozen message in your Inbox. But let's not kid around: if like most people you have more than a thousand messages in your Outlook folders, you have a search nightmare on your hands.

Try these ideas.

1. Divide your messages up into subdirectories.
Once you've created subdirectories and siphoned all your messages from your Inbox, stop the global searches and restrict your searching to individual subdirectories. By cutting down on the number of messages Outlook needs to search, your search results will speed up dramatically.

2. Install a message indexer.
Search engines like Yahoo and Google don't actually clean every page on the Web each time you plug in a search term; if they did, you'd grow cobwebs waiting for your results. Instead, these services continually scan millions of Web pages and create a massive index of their contents. When you perform a Google or Yahoo search, the lightning-fast results come courtesy of the index.

 

E-mail indexers use the same principle to speed up your searches. Install Lookout, a plug-in that installs its own search box into the Outlook user interface. The first time you run Lookout, the program indexes all of your e-mail messages, a process that can take several minutes, depending on how many messages you have. Once the indexing is completed, just type in a search term, and your results will appear almost instantaneously. You can set Lookout (which was recently acquired by Microsoft) to index new messages in the background so that you never have to go through the start-up index process again.