Just wanted to sincerely thank you for creating this video series! Fantastic tutorials. You've managed to simplify and break down this extremely useful yet overly complicated and hidden feature (on windows anyway) that has always baffled me. I'm reformatting my thesis now with numbered equations and correct allignment. I hope you go on to create some more tutorials because the world will truly be better off with them.
@@wuddadid Wow, thank you so much for commenting and letting me know! And I'm so glad you found this useful!! Good luck and all the best to your thesis. And do not hesitate to let me know if you encounter any other things you need done on Word, I may or may not have come across a method/workaround that I can make more videos to add to this series. :)
I was having trouble finding some of the instructions you mention because I don't have a Mac, but in Windows and Word 365: 2:41 Creating a sequence field Insert > Quick Parts > Field... 5:27 Update sequence shortcut Select text > F9 Create Field Codes Ctrl+F9 Toggle Field Codes Alt+F9 Thank you for your video!
Hi there, I hope you can see my comments, I just want to know, if we follow with this building block method, how can we cross reference the equation over the documents. Since we are not using the caption route, I am just wondering how to cross reference the equation..
Hi, sorry for the late reply! I do it this way: th-cam.com/video/u_qqEVTQqmg/w-d-xo.htmlsi=Xq71j7rVox5YsXGi Here is also the full playlist of ~20vids of different equation typing tricks with Word, hope you find them useful: th-cam.com/play/PLtLqKaRi3ZvK3UmSBcKFJVReJmyySMsSW.html&si=qvEGEKQoEAHs1Z5g If you need something else, just ask!
Your video was a big help. But how do you cross reference a seq? That is, refer to equation x somewhere in the text. Of course if the equation number were to change, it makes sense that the cross reference(s) would also update.
At 6:18, Shift-F9 could stand for "See field codes" (With the S standing for Shift or See). Still, I have Office 365, and the Shift-F9 command does nothing. However highlighting the field and then right-clicking will bring up a menu which includes "Toggle Field Codes".
I m doing math paper typing with this field code...but i could not write fractional exponent....soo could u give me some ideas...how to write fraction in exponent.???
Hi Alex, sorry for the late reply. You can definitely do it, but I don't think field code is the most efficient/elegant way. See the first 3 mins of this video, and see if this achieves what you want?: th-cam.com/video/lR0ANC5THcg/w-d-xo.html
PART 2 (on setting up the template and shortcut) here:
th-cam.com/video/gclYKPBENKE/w-d-xo.html
Just wanted to sincerely thank you for creating this video series! Fantastic tutorials. You've managed to simplify and break down this extremely useful yet overly complicated and hidden feature (on windows anyway) that has always baffled me. I'm reformatting my thesis now with numbered equations and correct allignment. I hope you go on to create some more tutorials because the world will truly be better off with them.
@@wuddadid Wow, thank you so much for commenting and letting me know! And I'm so glad you found this useful!! Good luck and all the best to your thesis. And do not hesitate to let me know if you encounter any other things you need done on Word, I may or may not have come across a method/workaround that I can make more videos to add to this series. :)
I was having trouble finding some of the instructions you mention because I don't have a Mac, but in Windows and Word 365:
2:41 Creating a sequence field
Insert > Quick Parts > Field...
5:27 Update sequence shortcut
Select text > F9
Create Field Codes
Ctrl+F9
Toggle Field Codes
Alt+F9
Thank you for your video!
Hi there, I hope you can see my comments, I just want to know, if we follow with this building block method, how can we cross reference the equation over the documents. Since we are not using the caption route, I am just wondering how to cross reference the equation..
Hi, sorry for the late reply! I do it this way:
th-cam.com/video/u_qqEVTQqmg/w-d-xo.htmlsi=Xq71j7rVox5YsXGi
Here is also the full playlist of ~20vids of different equation typing tricks with Word, hope you find them useful:
th-cam.com/play/PLtLqKaRi3ZvK3UmSBcKFJVReJmyySMsSW.html&si=qvEGEKQoEAHs1Z5g
If you need something else, just ask!
Your video was a big help. But how do you cross reference a seq? That is, refer to equation x somewhere in the text. Of course if the equation number were to change, it makes sense that the cross reference(s) would also update.
Your video series is extremely helpful, thank you!
Thank you for the kind comment! Always open to more suggestions as well!
Thank you for the nice video!
Thanks for the feedback!
At 6:18, Shift-F9 could stand for "See field codes" (With the S standing for Shift or See). Still, I have Office 365, and the Shift-F9 command does nothing. However highlighting the field and then right-clicking will bring up a menu which includes "Toggle Field Codes".
Interesting. I'm using Office 365 on a Mac. Not sure if that makes a difference.
I m doing math paper typing with this field code...but i could not write fractional exponent....soo could u give me some ideas...how to write fraction in exponent.???
Hi Alex, sorry for the late reply. You can definitely do it, but I don't think field code is the most efficient/elegant way. See the first 3 mins of this video, and see if this achieves what you want?: th-cam.com/video/lR0ANC5THcg/w-d-xo.html
7:58 To see all field code, Alt+F9 will do without the need to select everything :)
Oh brilliant, thanks! I wasn't even aware of this. I will start using it from now on as well! :)
How make equation to image in word
I think the only way is to do a screenshot or via the snipping tool, if you want to get an image from a Word equation