

The background color of a paragraph will be changed to look like the text has been highlighted instead. Multilevel lists will be transformed to single-level bulleted lists but the indentation stays the same. That way you can make changes to a copy of the file while keeping the content in the original file intact.Īnnotations, including comments, revisions, and bookmarksĭrawingML, MathML, and custom XML content in Office Open XML format text documentsĬhart content, mathematical content, and graphic content in OpenDocument format text documents If you want to change such a file, but don’t want to lose the original content, tap or click Save as and save the file with a different name. If you open a file with these features and then save the file in WordPad, you’ll lose the content in these features. two white symbols and one blue, and the white symbols are one above the other, then of course, use shift for the white symbols.Some features-like headers, footers, and annotations-aren’t supported in WordPad. So if a key has a white symbol and a blue symbol, then no shift key is used even if one symbol is above the other. So, both insert keys are fine, just don't hold shift.Īnd obviously if an insert key is printing 0s then it's a num lock issue but that wasn't the case with me. A character not on the keyboard can be entered into Wordpad by typing its. The other insert key on that keyboard, is in the number pad, and num lock affects that one. WordPad is the basic word processor that has been included with almost all versions of. Click Create.A new blank document appears in the Word window. (except that Fn + that key does print screen rather than num lock). To create a new blank document: Click the Microsoft Office button.Select New.The New Document dialog box appears.Select Blank document under the Blank and recent section.It will be highlighted by default. The one in the top row, is like the key on the keyboard in the top picture.

One in the top row and one in the number pad. On the keyboard in the bottom picture, there are two insert keys. And num lock only affects the insert key on the number pad, of which that key is not it. Hitting the Fn key with that key would toggle Num Lock. (I thought I was hitting shift to reach insert). I didn't know that at the time and so at the time, I similarly, I didn't realise I was doing shift+insert at the time. On any computer, hitting Shift+Insert, in wordpad, will paste. But no, insert while written at the top of the key, is not reached with shift. I mistakenly thought insert was reached with shift. But, the num lock won't/doesn't affect whether or not that insert key toggles overwrite. I don't see any purpose to the num lock key on that one as it has no number pad. That keyboard has only one insert key - that one. On the keyboard that has only a INS/Num lock key (the top pic).
