I have Word file contains 10000+ lines among them 4503 words are blue & red colored. I want to extract all those blue and red colored word with its links.
As I have shown in image the link are on various number. And word are written before it.
Replace/ Format/ Font/ Font color: Automatic (or black)/ OK
Replace with ^p
Replace all.
Related
The point is that I want to copy the piece of code to the Word doc, and the result is that I get the text that is unmarked with colours.
How can I get the same text - with violet, orange, green, etc. colours like in PostgeSQL (PGAdmin4)?
My team wants to highlight a certain word by using a yellow background, as a reminder that this value needs to be edited manually.
Desired result:
I try to make this happen (inspired by this answer). I format a line of text in my reference text as Times New roman with font size 12, with bold text and a yellow background. I then save the format as a "character"-type style and I save it under "boldyellow" in order to avoid underscores.
In my r markdown document I write:
<span custom-style=“boldyellow”>SKRIV IN ANTAL</span> av **21** regioner moretext moretext.
With no obvious result:
Am I missing one or more steps I haven't tought of? Is this possible at all using this method?
I have an openoffice text using different styles. I need to extract all text in one style as a text .txt file (but not including text marked in the other styles). How can this be achieved?
I tried to mark other styles as hidden and save as .txt, but the result contains all text, not only the one which is visible. If I save as .pdf and then cut and paste the text from I get what I need, but this seems a roundabout solution and I am certain a better one exists.
To select all text with a certain paragraph style, go to Edit -> Find & Replace. Expand Other options and check Paragraph Styles. Then select the style name to Find and press Find All.
Now close the dialog. Copy and paste to a text editor such as Notepad (depending on your operating system). Then save the text file from the text editor.
For character styles, this will not work, so use AltSearch.
I'm loving sublimerge. But after looking through the docs I can't find any way to ignore blank lines.
In the image below, you can see a difference indicated by the green and pink arrows. The description just says "Right Line Missing". As you can see, the only difference here is that the file on the right does not have this blank line.
How can I make sublimerge ignore these blank lines? I've tried just removing all the blank lines in each file using search and replace in sublime and then running sublimerge, and that works.. but this isn't the optimal solution for me as I like having blank lines in between functions, etc.
In Visio 2013, I have a connector that is in a container that has a gray background color. I successfully changed the background color of the text block by following these steps:
Double-click the connector
Expand the font options by clicking on the icon in the lower-right portion of the 'Home > Font' ribbon area
Click on 'Text Block' tab in the 'Text' dialog
Select 'Solid color' and choose the background color that matches the gray container background color
That works as expected - my text background color is no longer the default white; it now matches the background color of the container.
However, I want to add spacing to the left and right of the text. I tried increasing the margins in the same 'Text Block' tab of the 'Text' dialog mentioned above. This increased the margins but did not extend the background color of the text. A also tried manually adding spaces to the left and right of the text. The leading spaces worked, but the trailing spaces where truncated. Is there any way to add left and right padding to the text (similar to css padding)?
Modifying the text block location/size may give you what you want, combined with text margins.
To modify the text block location, you have to click the text block tool, which is on a dropdown with the text tool (at least in Visio 2003).
I know this is an old question, but I had the same question myself and wasn't able to (quickly) find an answer out there either. I finally hit upon a trick that'll get the result we're looking for:
Instead of spaces, add leading and trailing characters to the longest line in the text box. (I use ".")
Change the color of ONLY those added characters so it matches the text box's background.
The text box's background reaches to the furthest edge of the text within, and we're just using that to get what we want. Since it's just moving the edge indirectly, I consider it a "trick" that we can use instead of a "fix".
Quick list of Cons:
The text box background color has to be solid, or close to it.
The "invisible" text will still exist, so it'll show up in a copy/paste of the text.
Similarly, it may make Searching/CTRL+F for things within the document/file more difficult.
You can use No-Break Space. Insert it from Insert > Symbol.