Rearranging text with Spike
Office for Mere Mortals / 17 June 2008

Office Watch ebooks - available for you today

Microsoft has long produced software with a belt-and-braces approach, offering a choice of ways to perform a particular task.

For example, in Word, you'll find a smorgasbord of methods for cutting, copying and pasting text. There's the usual cut, copy and paste via keystroke, menu or toolbar. There's also the Office Clipboard, which is like copy-and-paste on steroids. Then there's the often-overlooked spike, which sits halfway between the other two methods in terms of power.

The spike lets you quickly reorganize snippets of text and graphics. You grab the snippets from different locations in your document, place them one by one on the spike, then use the Insert From Spike command to paste them as a block into your document.

The spike didn't qualify for inclusion in Word's menus or toolbars, but you can easily access it using the keyboard: Ctrl+F3 cuts the selected text and places it on the spike; Ctrl+Shift+F3 copies the entire contents of the spike into the document at the current location.

So if you're working on a masterpiece such as this:

Oil, that is. Black gold. Texas tea.

A poor mountaineer, barely kept his family fed,

When up through the ground came a bubblin' crude.

Then one day he was shootin' at some food

Come listen to a story 'bout a man named Jed

and decide a little rearranging would improve its readability, select the fifth line and press Ctrl+F3; then line 2 and press Ctrl+F3; line 4, Ctrl+F3; line 3, Ctrl+F3; line 1, Ctrl+F3; and finally press Ctrl+Shift+F3 to paste the newly arranged result:

Come listen to a story 'bout a man named Jed

A poor mountaineer, barely kept his family fed,

Then one day he was shootin' at some food

When up through the ground came a bubblin' crude.

Oil, that is. Black gold. Texas tea.

Of course, the spike really comes into its own when you're writing something a little more weighty and need to rearrange entire paragraphs or sections to create the best flow.

SPIKE'S IDIOSYNCRACIES

There are several things worth noting about the spike.

AVOIDING BLANK LINES

You may find it useful to switch off Smart Paragraph Selection in order to avoid creating blank lines between each of the items on the spike.

With Smart Paragraph Selection enabled, it's impossible to select a paragraph without grabbing that final paragraph mark as well. If you spike the series of lines from our previous example with Smart Paragraph Selection enabled, you'll end up with this:

Come listen to a story 'bout a man named Jed

A poor mountaineer, barely kept his family fed,

Then one day he was shootin' at some food

When up through the ground came a bubblin' crude.

Oil, that is. Black gold. Texas tea.

If you switch Smart Paragraph Selection off, you can select a paragraph minus the paragraph mark by dragging carefully to the text end; you can still grab the paragraph mark if you want to by dragging past the "end" of your paragraph to include the mark. You can also grab a paragraph complete with its paragraph mark by placing the cursor in the left-hand margin and dragging down.

To turn Smart Paragraph Selection off, in Word 2007 click the Office Button -> Word Options -> Advanced and deselect Use Smart Paragraph Selection. In Word 2003, click Tools -> Word Options -> Edit tab and deselect Use Smart Paragraph Selection.

To save bandwidth, we have suppressed any images in the PDA version of this article. Click here to see the uncompromising version of this article (in a desktop browser).




Office Watch - mobile edition - Home
Office Watch
Office for Mere Mortals
Email Essentials
Buying Office
Office 2010 - the next MS Office Winks
Office News Wire

Mobile edition of Office Watch, your independent source of MS Office news, tips and information - Copyright Office Watch 1996-2010

Use this link to see the full size browser version of Office Watch