- If you upgrade and do not take the time to learn some functions and to customise your system, your productivity WILL DECLINE.
- If you take that time out to set your system up properly, your level of productivity WILL INCREASE.
Where are my toolbars?
If you open your 2003 documents in 2007, your toolbars are still there but one layer deeper. If you have toolbars, you will see an Add-ins tab.- From the Ribbon, click the Add-ins tab. Your toolbars will be displayed.
- Select the command you want from the toolbar.
The Quick Access Toolbar
The toolbars have been partially replaced by a single, mostly user-defined Quick Access Toolbar.You can place any command and any macro on the QAT. I have 44 buttons on my QAT, and there is room for more. I do have a wide screen, so part 1 of your upgrade solution is:
- Get a wide screen monitor if you do not already have one – there are two reasons you need a wide screen as you will see later.
- Learn how to use your QAT and start setting it up to suit your personal needs. It is so easy to add and remove buttons that you do not need to get it right first time; you can let it evolve. You can also set up QAT components that are document, add-in or template specific. For instructions for how to set up your Quick Access Toolbar click here.
Styles
The one thing you cannot put on the QAT is styles - which is perhaps the most common thing we do put on toolbars. If you remove styles from all your toolbars, you will probably find you have more than enough space on the QAT for the rest. To get round the issue of no styles on the QAT I work with my Styles pane open, and I rank my styles so that the most commonly used 30 or so (defined by the height of my screen) are ranked number one and so always show. As these are template dependent, my ranking can change from template to template.- Learn how to use set up your Styles. For instructions for how to set up your Styles click here.
This combination of QAT and the Styles pane has effectively replaced toolbars for me. Perhaps there are some users with such complex needs that they cannot be satisfied by 40+ commands on the QAT and 30+ styles, but for most of us, we have more than enough commands that are visible on the screen at all times and that can be accessed with one click.
But what about the keyboard shortcuts?
There is a vast amount of misinformation about keyboard shortcuts.There are now TWO systems for keyboard entry, the 2003 system that uses the Ctrl key and a new one that is ribbon and command based and uses the Alt key. If you can't find a command in one system, you certainly will find it in the other. I am told that a very few of the old keyboard shortcuts have changed, however, you are still able to assign your own keyboard shortcuts, so if you are unhappy with the given shortcut you can change it.
- If you are a shortcut user, check out both systems, and redefine any shortcuts you can't accommodate. For instructions for how to re-define shortcuts click here.