Word 2007 is one of the major components of Microsoft's Office 2007 suite.
As with the majority of Office 2007 applications, it uses the new
ribbon-style menu system.
The Home ribbon gives character, paragraph and style formatting, plus
clipboard and search tools.
The dull default Arial-and-Times styles we’ve been used to have been replaced
by elegant combinations of font, colour and formatting, arranged in a palette.
Hover the mouse over a style and you get a preview of the selected text – a
click confirms, while moving the mouse off the palette cancels. You can also
change to a different style set, which affects the whole document - again, you
get a preview.
Complementing styles are
Themes
(accessible from the Page Layout Ribbon). These apply a complete set of fonts,
colours and graphic effects to an entire document.
The Insert ribbon covers everything that was previously in the Insert menu
(dates, graphics, text boxes etc.), but also things that also belong there, such
as headers, footers, and tables.
Other ribbons cover References (footnotes etc), Mailings (mail merge,
envelopes, etc), Reviewing (comments, proofing, and mark-up) and View. The View
ribbon encompasses the former View and Window menus, as well as access to
macros. If you have the optional Developer ribbon enabled, then you get more
macro and VBA tools, document protection, XML schemas and form controls.
The only menu left is the Office menu, lurking behind the top-left logo: this
contains the old File menu, the options dialogue and up to 50 recently used
files. A useful touch is that you can ‘pin’ files to this list so they that stay
put.
The Status bar has also had a makeover and now includes a running word count
and a zoom control. Another new suite-wide feature is the
mini-toolbar.
Select some text and a ghostly transparent toolbar appears beside it – mouse
over this, or right-click, and it firms up to provide basic formatting. Note
that the taskpane is still available for jobs such as accessing clip-art or the
thesaurus.
The contextual spelling check is another welcome new feature. This is
designed to spot a correctly spelled word in the wrong place – "it’s" instead of
"its", for instance.
Although the ribbon takes getting used to, you’ll find many sections have a
small arrow to the right of the label – this summons the traditional dialogue.
Other aids include pop-ups for keyboard shortcuts; press the Alt key and
letters will appear on the ribbons and tabs prompting further input. If you’re
still stuck, as well as off-line text help there’s an online Flash guide to
finding Word 2003 commands in 2007.
Surprisingly, given the extent of the makeover, Microsoft still hasn’t got
window handling consistent. With multiple documents open in Excel, you're given
one program window and taskbar buttons for each worksheet, which makes sense.
However, with Word you are stuck with either multiple program windows – each
with its own ribbon and taskbar button - or a single parent with a single
taskbar button just showing the active document.
Word 2007 brings with it plenty of improvements, but the lack of
customisation options will frustrate some.
This article is part of our complete Microsoft Office 2007 review
Microsoft Office 2007 overview
Microsoft Excel 2007 review
Microsoft Outlook 2007 review
See also
Microsoft Windows Vista review
Video
review: Windows Vista
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many home and business users
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