OO Writer is smart, much smarter than me. ![]() THIS IS HOW IT LOOKS WHEN A PARAGRAPH JUMPS TO THE RIGHTīetween batts and boards, why not use batts Wherever possible? The savings of switching to batts between theĪ continuous solid surface is required for primary WRB installation, and Now thinking of the 230%Ĭost increase between batts and boards, why not use batts Outboard of single frame, then added an outer frame, stuffing the WhatĤ) My thinking started with exterior insulation boards fastened All fail for me.ģ) I have read conflicting reports regarding Roxul below grade. I have tried F12 on and off, opening or closing the small Bullets and Numbering pop-up, going to Tools/Autocorrect Options/Options/Apply numbering: checked and unchecked. Is there any way to turn off this automatic function so that I can indent a line, give it a number, add highlighting, and have all stay where I first type them, whether I add another indented and numbered line below it or not? When all this happens to an entire paragraph it take me 5 minutes to correct. Also gaps appear in the text, and any highlighting jumps left with the text and stays put after I move the text, each lines few spaces of highlighting must be individually deleted. When this last item happens, I am not allowed to place the cursor at the left end of the line and move it to back to the right with the space bar first I must clik at the end of the previous line. Automatic numbering is driving me crazy by adding numbered and indented lines where I don't want them, preventing me from adding them where I do want them, and shifting to the left margin text that I want indented. The line starts with a one or two digit number followed by a right parenthesis. ![]() This is a handy option for keeping row and column labels visible in spreadsheets.I type many documents with many lines numbered and indented to the right a few spaces. You can also freeze rows and columns much the same with alternative spreadsheet packages such as Excel. That removes the horizontal/vertical freeze lines that were on the spreadsheet. Click Window > Freeze to remove the checkmark beside the option. Having frozen the rows and columns, you can also unfreeze them. All the rows above and columns to the left of those lines remain in view as you scroll across the spreadsheet. Select Window > Freeze and both a horizontal and vertical line will then appear on your spreadsheet as below. Click on a cell that is immediately below the row and just to the right of columns that you’re going to freeze. You can also freeze both rows and columns. All the rows above that line are frozen, and they will stay at the top of the spreadsheet when you scroll down the page. Click on Window and the Freeze option to add a dark line that runs across the spreadsheet as below. To freeze spreadsheet rows, click on the header of the row (its number) directly below where you intend to freeze it. Now move the scroll bar to the right, and the frozen column remain stationary on the left of the spreadsheet. A dark line should appear on the spreadsheet, as in the shot below, which highlights where you placed the freeze. Then you should click Window and the Freeze option from the menu. ![]() Open a OpenOffice spreadsheet, and then click on a column header to the right of where you want to freeze. As such, with the freeze option you can lock a number of rows and columns on the top or left of a spreadsheet. OpenOffice Calc has an option with which you can freeze selected columns and rows so that they always remain visible, even if you have scrolled some way down or across the spreadsheet. If you have opened a large OpenOffice spreadsheet document, it might be handy to keep some of its rows and columns stationary.
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