A text box
is a graphical container that holds text and works like a minidocument
you can place anywhere within a regular document. Although it holds
text, a text box itself is actually a graphic; the text it contains is
independent from the document’s body text. You can format a text box’s
text in most of the same ways you can format a document’s normal text.
But because the box is a shape, you can drag it to a different
position, resize it, and format it like other shapes.
The text box is one of the secret weapons of great
document layouts. In fact, lots of multicolumn documents, such as the
newsletter template shown in Figure 1,
don’t use columns at all. Instead, they are laid out with text boxes.
In the figure, the newsletter is just a series of text boxes, sized and
formatted in different ways, but neatly arranged to imitate a
two-column design.
The following sections show you how to insert a text
box into a document, resize and move it, format the box itself and the
text inside it, and other cool tricks.
Inserting a Text Box
You
can create a text box in two ways. The first (and quicker) way is to
insert a building block that is already formatted. The second (and
slower) way is to draw a text box with your pointer and do all the
formatting yourself. Either way, when a text box is selected, the
Drawing Tools Format tab appears on the Ribbon and the text box is
surrounded by a thin border and selection/sizing handles.
Creating a Text Box from a Building Block
If you create a text box from a building block, most
of the work is done for you. The building blocks used for text boxes
are preformatted with a border (and sometimes a fill) that coordinates
with the document’s theme colors. The text is already formatted, too.
All you need to do is add your own text. Here’s how to create a text
block from a building block:
1. | On
the Insert tab, click Text Box. A menu drops down, showing thumbnail
versions of Word’s built-in building blocks for text boxes, as shown in
Figure 2.
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2. | In
the Built-In section of the menu, click one of the thumbnails. The new
text box contains sample text, so you can see how it is formatted. The
sample text is selected so you can delete it or type over it.
If you select the Simple Text Box building block,
Word inserts a box in the middle of the page, in front of the
document’s text. If you select any other building block, it is inserted
as shown in the Text Box menu; the document’s text wraps around the
block according to that block’s default text wrapping setting.
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3. | Press Del to delete the sample text from the box. A blinking insertion point appears in its place.
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4. | Type your text into the text box. |
5. | Click outside the text box to deselect it.
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If you want to see more building blocks, click More
Text Boxes From Office.com on the Text Box menu. A submenu pops out,
showing a selection of text boxes available from the Office.com
website. Click any building block to add it to the document.
Drawing a Text Box
You can draw a text box with your pointer, but
you’ll have to do all the formatting when you’re done. Here’s how to
draw a text box:
1. | On the Insert tab, click Text Box.
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2. | Click Draw Text Box. The pointer changes to a crosshair.
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3. | Drag the pointer to draw a box, as shown in Figure 3. When you release the mouse button, the insertion point appears inside the finished text box.
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4. | Type your text into the text box.
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5. | Click outside the text box to deselect it.
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When
you draw a text box, Word inserts the box wherever you draw it and
places the box in front of the document’s text.