![]() As with Next, each click of the Previous button takes you back to each item, one by one. ![]() If you continue to click Next, you’ll go to each subsequent page with every click.Īnd if you want to go back, click Previous. If you want to move to the next item in your document, you can click Next.įor example, if you choose Page and click Next, you’ll go to the following page. You can pick a page, section, line, bookmark, comment, and more. On the left, choose where you’d like to go from the list. Once you open the Go To tool, you should be on the Go To tab. On Mac, click Edit > Find > Go To from the menu bar or press Option + Command + G. On Windows, go to the Home tab, click the drop-down arrow next to Find, and select Go To. You can open the Go To tool using the menu or a keyboard shortcut in Word on Windows and Mac. Here’s what you’ll need to do to use this feature in Microsoft Word. You can quickly go to a page, line, or section, but you can also jump to a table, comment, or object. If you’re using something like a browser where they decided to have a keyboard shortcut for tabs- good luck switching between that shortcut and / the shortcuts that have been working for an internet millenium.There’s another option-using the Go To feature in Microsoft Word you can pop right to the spot you want. I just verified there are no keyboard shortcuts to do this. If you must use a silly feature to do that, use spaces. Please don’t “break the world” of keybaord navigation so that you can have a desktop that looks “a little better”. ![]() I realize that having 100 windows can create its own problem… but were you really using all 100 of those tabs? Really? If you have something you want to remind yourself to do later- track that in a reminder system. It makes it impossible to quickly switch between content views on a laptop without going to the trackpad. It completely breaks keyboard switching between different windows (substitute “tabbed view or other view” for windows). I think tabs are one of the most ill-begotten features of the internet age. Somehow tab view got turned on and I could not figure out how to turn it off! Frustrating because discussion of tabs in text editors are normally regarding the hidden ones inside the file that make big spaces LOL. Thank you for showing me where Apple hid this preference. For more full fledged word processing and text editing needs, I’ll rely on Pages app, Microsoft Word, and BBEdit or TextWrangler, but if you give TextEdit a try you might be surprised how fully featured it is for such a small lightweight application. I personally use TextEdit all the time for quickly glancing at simple text documents, as a plain text viewer, basic word processing where the complete Pages functionality is not necessary, quick and dirty outlining, as a quick and simple HTML source viewer, and much more. Not everyone uses TextEdit but it’s an under appreciated app on the Mac. ![]() You’ll need a modern version of Mac OS Sierra or later to have this feature, older versions of Mac OS do not have tabbed support in TextEdit. Why tabs are hidden by default in TextEdit isn’t entirely clear, but unlike in Safari where you can open a new tab with a keyboard shortcut, that isn’t (currently) an option in the MacOS TextEdit app. Optionally, merge all existing TextEdit windows into tabs by going to the ‘Window’ menu and choosing “Merge All Windows”.Click on the plus button to create a new tab.Pull down the “View” menu and choose “Show Tab Bar”.You may have noticed that tabs in TextEdit aren’t visible by default, so you’ll want to enable this little feature with a quick settings adjustment. ![]()
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