Question | Answer |
Draft View | A way of viewing a document on screen that shows only the text of a document; you don’t see headers and footers, margins, columns, or graphics. |
Full Screen Reading view | A way of viewing a document on screen that shows text on the screen in a form that is easy to read; the Ribbon is replaced by a small bar called a toolbar that contains only a few relevant commands. |
Insertion point | A blinking vertical line that shows where text will appear when you begin typing. |
Landscape orientation | A page or worksheet rotated so it us wider than it is long. |
Office button | A button that opens a menu with commands for working with files; including commands for opening, saving, printing, and creating new files. |
Outline view | A way of viewing a document on screen that displays headings and text displays headings and text in outline form so you can see the structure of your document and reorganize easily |
Portrait orientation | A page or worksheet rotated so it is longer than it is wide. |
Print Layout view | The most common way of viewing a document on screen; it shows how a document will look when it is printed, and you can work with headers and footers, margins, columns, and graphics, which are all displayed. |
Print Preview | A way of viewing a document on screen that enables you to see the document as it will appear when printed. |
Quick Access Toolbar | A small customizable toolbar at the top of the screen with buttons for common commands such as Save and Undo. |
Ribbon | An area at the top of an Office program window that contains commands for working with the open file; the commands are organized under tabs. |
Status Bar | A bar at the bottom of the program window that provides information about the current file and process. |
Toolbar | An area in a window that contains buttons used to execute a function or open a command menu. |
View buttons | In an Office Program window buttons that you can click to change views quickly. |
Web Layout view | A way of viewing a document on screen that simulates the way a document will look when it is viewed as a Web page; text and graphics appear the way they would in the Web browser, and backgrounds are visible. |
Word processing | The use of a computer and software to enter and edit text and produce documents such as letters, memos, forms, and reports. |
Word wrap | A feature in Word that automatically wraps words around to the next line when they will not fit on the current line. |
Zoom | The percentage the file is magnified or reduced on the screen; 100% zoom represents the normal size; percentages higher than that mean the document appears smaller on screen. |
Zoom slider | A bar in the lower-right corner of an Office program window that you can use to increase or decrease the size of the document on screen. |