Adding a box and a check mark in Word 97

R

Rick

I was wondering if anyone had a suggestions as to how to
add a box with a checkmark in it on Word97? Doesn't have
to be programmable. Just a box with a checkmark in it or
on top of it. I had someone request this and cannot figure
out how to get it completed.

Thank you,

Pocco
 
G

garfield-n-odie

Insert | Symbol | Font: Wingdings | second-to-last symbol on the last line.
 
S

Suzanne S. Barnhill

How you do this depends on how you intend to use the document and the check
box. If you're creating a protected (online) form, you can use the Check Box
form field. If you're creating a printed form that users will fill out with
pen or pencil, you can create an empty box in a variety of ways (more on
that later). If you're creating a document to be filled out on the computer
(but not a protected form), you may want to use the kind of check boxes used
in the fax cover sheet templates that ship
with Word. These consist of three components:

1. A MacroButton field that runs one of two macros depending on state.

2. A CheckIt macro and an UncheckIt macro.

3. Checked Box and Unchecked Box AutoText entries (these are just Wingdings
characters that have been saved as AutoText).

When the check box is empty (Unchecked Box is displayed), double-clicking on
the MacroButton runs the CheckIt macro, which substitutes the Checked Box,
and vice versa.

In order to use this type of box in your document, you need to Copy/Paste
the MacroButton field into your document/template, then use Organizer to
copy the macros and AutoText entries to your template (it has to be a
template because documents can't store AutoText entries, but you could copy
them to Normal.dot if you're just creating a document rather than a
template).

If you just need an empty box for users to check with a pen/pencil, you can
use one of several available font characters (such as the shadowed boxes in
Wingdings), or (my favorite) you can create a box using the EQ \x (box)
field. You'll find instructions for this in Word's Help under "Field codes:
EQ (Equation) field," but you can get the same effect by applying a border
to Text in the Borders and Shading dialog. What you want to put a border
around is some spaces, but the trick is that you can't use ordinary spaces:
at least one of them (the last) must be a nonbreak space. So type two or
three spaces and a nonbreak space, then apply a box border to it. You may
need to adjust the font size to make the box the size you want, but I find
this works very nicely.


--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA

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