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#1
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Changing the font in WordPad
Hi,
Can someone please tell me how to change the font in WordPad. I already know how to change it when I am creating something. I'd like to change it to Times New Roman as the startup font. Right now when it starts it uses Arial 10 Western. I'd like it to start with Times New Roman. Is this possible? How can I do it? Thanks for any and all responses. Bob, London, Kentucky |
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#2
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Changing the font in WordPad
"BobLondonKy" wrote in message
.. . Hi, Can someone please tell me how to change the font in WordPad. I already know how to change it when I am creating something. I'd like to change it to Times New Roman as the startup font. Right now when it starts it uses Arial 10 Western. I'd like it to start with Times New Roman. Is this possible? How can I do it? Thanks for any and all responses. Bob, London, Kentucky Because of it's default settings unfortunately there is no easy fix for this. However you might want to take a look at an alternative wordprocessor. This is cheap http://www.brothersoft.com/business/...pro_14883.html But if you need something free check here http://www.jarte.com/ or if you want something nearly as powerful as Microsoft Office this is an excellent choice http://www.openoffice.org/index.html but be aware that it is a very large download. Open Office can be configured to open/create/save files as MS Word documents -- Harry Ohrn MS MVP [Shell\User] |
#3
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Changing the font in WordPad
Found this on the web ... kind of kludgey ... put it works:
Start WordPad the Way You Want Every time I start my WordPad program, it uses the default font setting of point size 10 and I have to change it manually to the size I prefer. How can I change the default font size, style, and other properties? Sam Cimino, Merrillville, Indiana The short answer is, you can't. But you can work around this limitation fairly easily. Start WordPad, and if you have any boilerplate information, such as a logo or a letterhead graphic, type or paste that into a new document. Move the cursor to where you want to start typing your text, and type a space. Select the space you just typed, and apply the desired typeface, size, alignment, and other settings (see Figure 3). Now choose File, Save As, select a location that is unlikely to be moved or deleted, and give the file a name such as Template. Click Save. Now choose File, Save As again, but this time right-click the file you just saved in the dialog box, and select Properties. Check the Read-only box and click OK. This will protect the file from accidental changes. Click Cancel in the Save As dialog box. Right-click the Start button and choose Open. Navigate to the shortcut that you use to launch WordPad, right-click it, and choose Properties. Select the Shortcut tab, click the Target box, and press End to make sure the cursor is at the end of the command line. Type a space, followed by the path to your template file. If the path contains any spaces or long file names, enclose the entire path in quotation marks. If the program (Wordpad.exe) is already enclosed in quotation marks, you'll end up with two sets of quotation marks. For example, your final Target command line might read "C:\Program Files\Accessories\wordpad.exe" "C:\My Documents\Template.doc" (your path may differ). Then click OK. The next time you launch WordPad, it should open your template with the font you prefer. Because you made the file read-only, you won't have to worry about overwriting the template. If you choose File, Save instead of File, Save As, WordPad will still open the Save As dialog box, prompting you to save the file with a new file name each time you start a new document. You can extend this tip to create multiple WordPad shortcuts, each opening a template for a different purpose. "BobLondonKy" wrote in message .. . Hi, Can someone please tell me how to change the font in WordPad. I already know how to change it when I am creating something. I'd like to change it to Times New Roman as the startup font. Right now when it starts it uses Arial 10 Western. I'd like it to start with Times New Roman. Is this possible? How can I do it? Thanks for any and all responses. Bob, London, Kentucky |
#4
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Changing the font in WordPad
Learn something new every day. : -)
I don't suppose this would work as long as a person had Wordpad files associated with MS Word? -- Regards "Larry Gardner" wrote in message ... Found this on the web ... kind of kludgey ... put it works: Start WordPad the Way You Want Every time I start my WordPad program, it uses the default font setting of point size 10 and I have to change it manually to the size I prefer. How can I change the default font size, style, and other properties? Sam Cimino, Merrillville, Indiana The short answer is, you can't. But you can work around this limitation fairly easily. Start WordPad, and if you have any boilerplate information, such as a logo or a letterhead graphic, type or paste that into a new document. Move the cursor to where you want to start typing your text, and type a space. Select the space you just typed, and apply the desired typeface, size, alignment, and other settings (see Figure 3). Now choose File, Save As, select a location that is unlikely to be moved or deleted, and give the file a name such as Template. Click Save. Now choose File, Save As again, but this time right-click the file you just saved in the dialog box, and select Properties. Check the Read-only box and click OK. This will protect the file from accidental changes. Click Cancel in the Save As dialog box. Right-click the Start button and choose Open. Navigate to the shortcut that you use to launch WordPad, right-click it, and choose Properties. Select the Shortcut tab, click the Target box, and press End to make sure the cursor is at the end of the command line. Type a space, followed by the path to your template file. If the path contains any spaces or long file names, enclose the entire path in quotation marks. If the program (Wordpad.exe) is already enclosed in quotation marks, you'll end up with two sets of quotation marks. For example, your final Target command line might read "C:\Program Files\Accessories\wordpad.exe" "C:\My Documents\Template.doc" (your path may differ). Then click OK. The next time you launch WordPad, it should open your template with the font you prefer. Because you made the file read-only, you won't have to worry about overwriting the template. If you choose File, Save instead of File, Save As, WordPad will still open the Save As dialog box, prompting you to save the file with a new file name each time you start a new document. You can extend this tip to create multiple WordPad shortcuts, each opening a template for a different purpose. "BobLondonKy" wrote in message .. . Hi, Can someone please tell me how to change the font in WordPad. I already know how to change it when I am creating something. I'd like to change it to Times New Roman as the startup font. Right now when it starts it uses Arial 10 Western. I'd like it to start with Times New Roman. Is this possible? How can I do it? Thanks for any and all responses. Bob, London, Kentucky |
#5
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Changing the font in WordPad
If you have Wordpad files associated with MS Word, that is a different
story. In that case, you can force what Font can be used when creating a new document. This is based on Word 2002 (Word XP), but it may be the same for Word 2000 and up. 1. Open MS Word 2. Click on menu command Format | Font 3. From the Font Tab, Change Font to what you want 4. Click on Default left bottom of page (maybe someplace else on the tab page) ... you should get a prompt that states: Do you want to change the default font (Default) NEW FONT YOU SELECTED? This will affect all new documents based on the NORMAL template. 5. Click on Yes 6. Close MS Word You will be prompted: Do you want to save changes to Document1 7. Click No ... you still have modified the Normal Template Now whenever you create a new document, the default font is whatever you selected. You can also modify the Font for existing files when the style comes up as Plain Text - Courier New. "rustyfender04" wrote in message ... Learn something new every day. : -) I don't suppose this would work as long as a person had Wordpad files associated with MS Word? -- Regards "Larry Gardner" wrote in message ... Found this on the web ... kind of kludgey ... put it works: Start WordPad the Way You Want Every time I start my WordPad program, it uses the default font setting of point size 10 and I have to change it manually to the size I prefer. How can I change the default font size, style, and other properties? Sam Cimino, Merrillville, Indiana The short answer is, you can't. But you can work around this limitation fairly easily. Start WordPad, and if you have any boilerplate information, such as a logo or a letterhead graphic, type or paste that into a new document. Move the cursor to where you want to start typing your text, and type a space. Select the space you just typed, and apply the desired typeface, size, alignment, and other settings (see Figure 3). Now choose File, Save As, select a location that is unlikely to be moved or deleted, and give the file a name such as Template. Click Save. Now choose File, Save As again, but this time right-click the file you just saved in the dialog box, and select Properties. Check the Read-only box and click OK. This will protect the file from accidental changes. Click Cancel in the Save As dialog box. Right-click the Start button and choose Open. Navigate to the shortcut that you use to launch WordPad, right-click it, and choose Properties. Select the Shortcut tab, click the Target box, and press End to make sure the cursor is at the end of the command line. Type a space, followed by the path to your template file. If the path contains any spaces or long file names, enclose the entire path in quotation marks. If the program (Wordpad.exe) is already enclosed in quotation marks, you'll end up with two sets of quotation marks. For example, your final Target command line might read "C:\Program Files\Accessories\wordpad.exe" "C:\My Documents\Template.doc" (your path may differ). Then click OK. The next time you launch WordPad, it should open your template with the font you prefer. Because you made the file read-only, you won't have to worry about overwriting the template. If you choose File, Save instead of File, Save As, WordPad will still open the Save As dialog box, prompting you to save the file with a new file name each time you start a new document. You can extend this tip to create multiple WordPad shortcuts, each opening a template for a different purpose. "BobLondonKy" wrote in message .. . Hi, Can someone please tell me how to change the font in WordPad. I already know how to change it when I am creating something. I'd like to change it to Times New Roman as the startup font. Right now when it starts it uses Arial 10 Western. I'd like it to start with Times New Roman. Is this possible? How can I do it? Thanks for any and all responses. Bob, London, Kentucky |
#6
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Changing the font in WordPad
??? Am I missing something here?
If you associate Wordpad files with MS Word then they are no longer Wordpad files as they are now MS Word files. ....Alan -- Alan Edwards, MS MVP Windows - Internet Explorer http://dts-l.org/index.html On Tue, 30 May 2006 23:55:03 -0400, in microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics, "rustyfender04" wrote: Learn something new every day. : -) I don't suppose this would work as long as a person had Wordpad files associated with MS Word? |
#7
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Changing the font in WordPad
I assumed that, based on previous posts, that they had a question about when
they assocaiated Wordpad files to be opened by MS Word as the default. There really is no known Wordpad extension ... so with Wordpad ... you can set it up to be the default editor on nearly anything. Does not mean you can view it correctly, but you can set it as the Default Editor. So, if you associated .txt files to MS Word ... when you open them, the default editor would be MS Word. In that case, you may want to change the default font to something else. HOWEVER, when you save the doument ... it will save it as a .doc file or drop all the formatting you added. "Alan Edwards" wrote in message ... ??? Am I missing something here? If you associate Wordpad files with MS Word then they are no longer Wordpad files as they are now MS Word files. ...Alan -- Alan Edwards, MS MVP Windows - Internet Explorer http://dts-l.org/index.html On Tue, 30 May 2006 23:55:03 -0400, in microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics, "rustyfender04" wrote: Learn something new every day. : -) I don't suppose this would work as long as a person had Wordpad files associated with MS Word? |
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