Word provides a variety of ways you
can change the width of table
columns using the mouse. The exact effect of each method depends on
the version of Word you are using.
The simplest resizing you can do is to simply point to a column border
with the mouse pointer and drag the border to a new location. In Word
97, this adjusts the width of the column to the left of the border, as
well as the widths of all columns to the right of the border. The
overall width of the table remains the same, however. In Word 2000 and
Word 2002, only the widths of the columns separated by the border are
affected, and the overall width of the table remains the same.
If you hold down the Shift key as you drag a column border, the width
of the column to the left of the border is changed, and the overall
table width is adjusted accordingly. No other column widths are
affected.
If you hold down the Ctrl key as you drag a column border, width of
the column to the left of the column border is adjusted, and the
overall table width remains the same. All columns to the right of the
table border are adjusted so they are wider or narrower in a
proportional value.
If you hold down both Shift+Ctrl as you drag a column border, the
width of the column to the left is changed, the overall table width
remains the same, and all column widths to the right are adjusted so
they share equally in the remaining table width.
Holding down the Alt key as you drag a border adjust columns the same
as if you simply clicked and dragged a border. The only difference is
that Word adds precise width notations in the Ruler area for each
column. If you hold down Alt+Shift, you cannot drag any of the column
borders. If you hold down Alt+Ctrl or Alt+Shift+Ctrl, the effect is
the same as just holding down Ctrl (or Shift+Ctrl), with the addition
of the precise measurements. |