If you're writing some sort of coding tutorial, why do you need the code as text? You could include the examples as screenshots. I hope you aren't trying to program in Word. I just tried with code from Eclipse, I think it will support formatting from other IDEs too.Īlso, whatever you are doing, maybe you're trying to solve your problem in the wrong way. Just paste the code and select the option to preserve the original formatting. However, I don't see a reason for applying a style at all. Styles are meant to change the formatting of text, I don't think there is a way to stop this behaviour. Choosing the scheme will change the colours of the standard styles to the new ones, and you can always go back to standard by choosing the "Larissa" integrated colour scheme again.ĭisclaimer: As I had to backtranslate from my non-english Word, maybe I've gotten the names of some UI elements wrong, but I guess it will be easy to find them. There you can set colours for different purposes. At the bottom, there is a option called "Create new design colours". Select colours, and you are given the choice of the typical Word 2007 colour schemata. In the Styles section of the ribbon under the Start tab, there is the big button called "Change styles". If you have a corporate colour scheme and want to use the standard Word 2007 layouts but with your own colour scheme, there is an easy way to do that. Choose the colour you like, save your changes and you're done. Under Format, there is a drop-down box where you can select the font colour you like. In both cases, you see a new window where you can modify the (new copy of the) style. About the middle there is a modify button, click it. A new window opens with yet another list of styles, where your style is still selected. If you want to change the old one, select the button for managing styles. If you want to make a copy based on the old one, select the button for creating a new style. Select the style you want to change from the list. Click it, and you'll see a floating window listing all styles. In the lower right corner, there is a UI element, a small right angle with an arrow pointing away from it. In the ribbon, there is a section called Styles. To make a new style, go to the start tab. If you want to keep the old style for other documents, but change the colour for a specific document, just make a copy of the style, modify the copy and apply the modified style instead of the original one. If you don't like the colour it is applying, you should change the style itself. You don't want to stop it from doing that. A style is intended to modify the appearance of the text it is applied to, including colour.
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