(You can use lines you establish in your header/footer for an overall box effect. I aligned the left edge and used manual line breaks on the right since I wasn't showing the table lines. I discovered I could align either the L or R edge of the table but not both reliably. Sometimes I could resize the table to be within bounds, and then it would bounce back out. Broke it into a second table to see if that would help. On the second page, the table rows went out of bounds, as if I'd set different R and L page margins. I solved the last remaining problems by setting a specific (exactly, not at least) row height for each row and set each to allow breaking across pages. To remove these lines, you can select the paragraph with the line and select the Borders button in the Paragraph section of the Home tab. I copied the misbehaving likes to Notepad to strip hidden formatting, put them back, and they jumped to the bottom of their respective pages.ĢND FOLLOW UP: Word 2013 is either buggy or there is a demon in the online template I chose. They are consecutive pages so it isn't a folio verso thing. Table is formatted to put all text at the top. )įOLLOW UP: Actually, the above described technique helped, but I still get two pages with two lines at the bottom. Thanks to Rick for mentioning that nasty "Keep with next" setting. I found it difficult to do it while still in the table, because I could pull up the Paragraph settings only randomly, not consistently. Then I could select the entire thing and turn off widow and orphan control. The default in the resume template I used was "keep with next." I copied the column to a new document and converted it from table to text.
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