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Microsoft Onenote 2010 : Using Tables to Organize Information (part 3) - Resizing a Table Column,Selecting an Entire Table

1/2/2015 8:38:09 PM

Resizing a Table Column

When you type text into the cells in a table, the rows and columns of the table will adapt to the size and length of the text in and around those cells. Although you can only manually expand table rows by using line breaks , you can manually adjust the width of a column with your mouse.

To resize a table column, do the following:

1.
Move the mouse pointer over the right border of any cell whose column you want to expand or contract.

2.
When the mouse pointer changes to the resize cursor (see Figure4), click and drag the column border to the left or right until it is the size you want and then release the mouse button.

Figure 4. Moving the mouse over the vertical border between two table columns changes the pointer to the resize cursor. Clicking and dragging the mouse at this point will change the dimensions of the column to the left of the pointer.


Although you can select individual cells in OneNote tables for the purpose of copying and formatting them, OneNote 2010 does not offer a way to specify a precise size measurement of any parts of a table. This is because tables in OneNote are primarily intended to organize information on your notes pages. Because table cells automatically adapt to their contents, setting cell-based properties typically isn’t necessary.

If the precise dimensions of a table are critical for some reason, you can work around the lack of table properties in OneNote by creating a table grid in another Office program (or even a drawing program), formatting its cells with the exact dimensions you want, and then inserting a picture of this table grid as a picture or screen clipping. After the picture is inserted on your notes page, position it where you want it to appear, right-click the picture, and then click Set Picture as Background. Now you can click anywhere over the picture and type text into the cells that appear behind the text. To precisely position note containers over the grid in the picture, hold the Alt key while dragging a note container to align it.


Selecting an Entire Table

You can quickly select all of the text in a table by doing the following:

1.
Click any cell in your table.

2.
On the ribbon, above the Layout tab, click Table Tools.

3.
In the Select group, click Select Table.

To select a table more quickly, right-click any table cell, click Table on the shortcut menu that appears, and then click Select Table.


An entirely different way to select a table or parts of a table is to use the progressive Select All command in OneNote, which is available through the Ctrl+A keyboard shortcut. Although this command is not exclusive for use with selecting tables, its unique behavior, compared with the Select All command in other programs, is especially apparent when you try it out within a table.

Click in any cell in your table and then press Ctrl+A. OneNote selects the current cell. Pressing Ctrl+A again will extend the current selection to the entire row in which the previously selected cell is located. If you press Ctrl+A once more, OneNote will select the entire table. Finally, pressing Ctrl+A a fourth time will keep the current table selected and also select the note container that the entire table is placed in.

When your table is selected, you can format all its cells with the font, font size, text color, or cell alignment you want.

Selecting a Column in a Table

You can quickly select a column in a table by doing the following:

1.
Click any cell in your table.

2.
On the ribbon, above the Layout tab, click Table Tools.

3.
In the Select group, click Select Columns.

To select a column more quickly, right-click any table cell, click Table on the shortcut menu that appears, and then click Select Columns.


If the plural form in the Select Columns command seems out of place, it’s because you can use this command to select multiple columns, not just the current column. To do this, click any cell in the first column that you want to select, hold down the Shift key, and then click any cell in the last column that you want to select. When you now use the Select Columns command, either on the ribbon or on the right-click menu, OneNote will select all of the columns between and including the columns of the two cells you selected.

After any column is selected, you can format it with the font, font size, font style, text color, or cell alignment you want.

 
Others
 
- Microsoft Onenote 2010 : Using Tables to Organize Information (part 2) - Inserting a New Row in a Table
- Microsoft Onenote 2010 : Using Tables to Organize Information (part 1) - Creating a Table
- Microsoft Onenote 2010 : Organizing and Searching Notes - Organizing Items on a Page (part 2) - Organizing Notes Chronologically
- Microsoft Onenote 2010 : Organizing and Searching Notes - Organizing Items on a Page (part 1) - Merging Note Containers on a Page
- Microsoft Visio 2013 : Creating and Validating Process Diagrams - Creating and validating BPMN diagrams
- Microsoft Visio 2013 : Creating and Validating Process Diagrams - Understanding BPMN
- Microsoft Visio 2013 : Creating and Validating Process Diagrams - Understanding Visio rules, Validating flowcharts
- Microsoft Access 2010 : Sharing Data with Other Applications - Linking to Tables in Another Access Database
- Microsoft Access 2010 : Sharing Data with Other Applications - Importing ASCII Data
- Microsoft Access 2010 : Sharing Data with Other Applications - Importing Spreadsheet Data
 
 
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