![]() Hi Texasgal, If you are you not working with the Show/Hide characters switched on you will need to do that in order to see where the extra lines are. To do this: - Click the Show/Hide button in the toolbar (it's the one with the ¶ symbol in it) you will be able to see the paragraph formatting in your document. - Look for the end of paragraph markers (the little ¶ that are on a line of their own). - Click on the ¶ and then press on. When you are editing a document, you might want to consider working with the Show/Hide characters switched on, this will take away all the little 'surprises' such as the one you reported here. You can click the Show/Hide button to switch them on or off at random. >> Does this response help you? ![]() How to remove all horizontal lines from Word. Sometimes when you try to remove the horizontal line by selecting it and pressing Delete. Microsoft and the. Sep 28, 2017 Word Online (formerly Word Web App). You cannot adjust line spacing in Word Online. With Word Online, you can insert, edit, or delete. Jan 22, 2010 how to remove the horizontal line in MS word (2007 or 2000, any version)? I typed the following in ms word: --- (a horizontal line appeared automatically. How to Remove Automatic Horizontal Lines in Word. You can remove the line later. Here’s How Microsoft Plans on Making Money Instead. If so, would you please click on the green Vote As Helpful button to assist future visitors experiencing the same problem. Best, Sharon Sharon Roffey Queensland, Australia Sharon Roffey Queensland, Australia Microsoft Community Contributor Award recipient. Hi again texasgal, Another thought. If your resume is only one page, and you cannot delete enough lines to fit it on the page using the method above you can use the Shrink one page function in Print Preview. Click on the Microsoft Office button in the top left corner 2. Point to Print (don't click or it will activate a print command) 3. Click on Print Preview 4. Click on the Shrink one page link in the Preview category For the record, if either of the two solutions proposed works, could you let us know which one for the benefit of future visitors. Best, Sharon Sharon Roffey Queensland, Australia Sharon Roffey Queensland, Australia Microsoft Community Contributor Award recipient. ![]() If you are viewing the page in Normal View, the lines across the page may just be the automatic page breaks, or even Section Breaks. For me, I see very little use of the 'Normal' View. To me, Normal would be the way the page is going to print. That is the view if you change the view to Print Layout View. And Print Layout View is the view I almost always prefer and use. (On occasion I may switch the view to one of the others, but not too often.) As for getting lines, sort of like fancy underlines, across the page, there are six sets of 'underlines' that can be set by entering ONLY three of the same repeated characters on the line after the text you want 'underlined'. (Note: it actually it is a Text bottom border applied to that line. There are a couple dozen different types of borders you can select, but six of them you 'can type' to have it applied to the bottom of the text line.) The six characters are Underline (_), Pound (#), Dash (-), Asterisk (*), Tilde (~), and Equals (=). Try this after typing in some text, press the Enter key to get a new line, than type 3 Pound signs (###), NOTHING ELSE, and then press the Enter key again. You will see the 3 #'s go away, and the previous text will now have a relatively heavy multi-lined underline going across the full text area of the page. After you see what happens with the 3 #'s, try it again with 3 identical previously named characters. (Hint: I remember those 6 characters from the acronym that spell U P D A T E.) Anyway, enough fun. So, if that sort of underline how do you remove it? Simple, just select the line that has the 'underline' attached to it, and select the command Format>Borders and Shading, Borders, Setting: None then click the [OK] button.
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