Intro: What's a Style
In Word, a style defines a set of formatting properties that are indirectly applied to characters, paragraphs, list, or tables. Instead of directly applying bold, then 14 point font, and then red to text,
Office 2007 Enterprise, you can use a style to indirectly apply these three things in a single click. This is useful because you can quickly and consistently apply rich formatting, and can later change the definition of the style all the text the style is applied will change.
For example, the Heading 1 style in Word 2003 specifies the font, font size, and font color properties (among others) as: Arial, 16 point, and automatic, while in Word 2007 Heading 1's font, font size, and font color properties are: Cambria, 14 point, and blue-Accent 1-Darker 25%. Because these properties changed Between Word 2003 to Word 2007, applying the Heading 1 style in Word 2003 will give you a different looking heading than if you did the same thing in Word 2007. And if you are not a big fan of Heading 1 in 2003 or 2007, you can change the font,
Windows 7 Ultimate, font size, and font color properties in both versions and those changes will be applied to every instance of Heading 1 in the given document. Quick, consistent, and rich formatting that can be changed once and trickle through the whole document.
Note: This does not mean that when you open a document created in Word 2003 in Word 2007 that all instances of Heading 1 will change. It just means that applying Heading 1 for the first time in Word 2007 will give you different results than applying Heading 1 for the first time in Word 2003. We store the properties of each style in the document to ensure that once applied they look the same regardless of which version of Word you open the file in.
That's a really really quick introduction to styles. I'm going to spend the rest of this post going deeper into the various types of styles and how they relate to one another. If you are not 100% clear on the basics of styles, please read Stuart's previous post before reading further.
Six Types of Styles
The Heading 1 style is an example of only one of many types of styles in Word. Specifically, it is an example of a linked style. Linked styles are a specific set of formatting properties that can be applied to entire paragraphs or subsets of paragraphs.
Experiment: Put your cursor in a paragraph, don't select anything,
Windows 7 Activation, and click Heading 1. It is applied to the whole paragraph. This is the paragraph side of the linked style. Now, select a subset of another paragraph and click Heading 1. It is applied only to the subset. This is the character side of the linked style.
The other types of styles enable you to apply a specific set of formatting properties to other content in Word, and they are: Character styles: define a set of formatting properties that can be applied to subsets of paragraphs. Example: Strong
Paragraph styles: define a specific set of formatting properties that can be applied to an entire paragraph Example: Normal
Fun Fact: You can easily identify Linked, Character, and Paragraph styles in the Styles Pane with the follow icons
Table styles: define a specific set of formatting for tables as well as for characters and paragraphs within the table. Example: the whole ############## shown when you insert a table in Word 2007
Numbering styles: define a specific set of properties for the list itself (i.e. graphic used for the bullet or Arabic vs. Roman numerals for your numbered list).
Document Defaults: define a specific set of global formatting properties for paragraphs and characters in this document
Optional Experiment: Open a new scrap document. Type "=rand()". Underline some text and make it red. Select that text, right click, and click Font. Click Default in lower left of the dialog that comes up. Click No. Note that all the Normal text in your document is underlined and red. Type a new paragraph, insert a comment, and type in the comment. Note that all of this text is underlined and red. This is all a result of you changing the Document Defaults.
Note: For those of you who would like to do more advanced manipulation of your document defaults,
Windows 7 Activation, you can modify them directly via the following dialog
How styles relate to one another
You may be wondering how Word deals with all this style. I can get you 80% of the way there with a relatively simple explanation. The remaining 20% is more complex and less common, so I'll go there only if I need to in later posts.
In short, styles build on top of one another. For example, if you have a numbered paragraph in a table, then the style layering logic in Word essentially works like this [Word is "speaking" in the example]: "Document Defaults, tell me what properties to apply to paragraphs and characters by default." "Table Style, tell me how the table should look—i.e., row shading, borders, etc.—and if you have any additional paragraph and character properties (i.e., stuff not in the Document Defaults). If you have additional properties, I'll add them. If you have any of the same properties as the Document Defaults—such as line spacing—but different values for those properties—such as 1 vs. 1.5—I'll use yours." "Paragraph Style, do you have any additional paragraph properties (i.e. stuff not in the Document Defaults or Table Style) that I need to apply to this paragraph? If you specify the same paragraph properties as the any of the previously applied styles I'll use yours." "Numbering Style, tell me how the numbered list should look and if you've got additional paragraph properties that I don't have yet. Of course, if you have different values for properties that I do already have, I'll use yours." "Character Style, do you have any additional character properties (i.e. stuff not in the Document Defaults or Table Style) that I need to apply? If you have the same character properties as the any of the previously applied styles, I'll use yours." "Is there any direct formatting—bold, italics, underline, font color, etc.—applied? If so,
Microsoft Office 2007 Key, I'll use those."
This story hopefully illustrates that: Multiple styles can be applied to the same part of a document, so properties defined in styles are applied in a specific order. The properties set by one type of style can be supplemented or superseded by other types of styles. The general hierarchy of style types is [from lowest to highest priority]: Document Defaults Table Styles Paragraph Styles | Paragraph Part of Linked Styles Numbering Styles Character Style | Character Part of Linked Styles Direct Formatting
That's really the bulk of it. And while I don't have a nifty mnemonic device like Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally to help you remember the order of operations for styles [feel free to suggest some J], hopefully this helps you better understand styles, and how they are ordered and applied in Word.
-Jonathan Bailor <div