J
jesse
It would be better to ask:
Who designed the form so that when user presses Enter it
allows the document to go screwy?
Well, here is the deal. Look at the document layout. Set
it up using Styles, and make sure that if tabbed columns
are needed, that entering information in the previous
column doesn't bump other text around.
Most of these problems can be eliminated using good layout
and design technique.
You're point however is a good one, but I don't believe
Word yet provides the ability of enabling or disabling the
Enter key when a user adds text. So, look at the layout.
Good forms take extensive planning to prevent these
pitfalls.
Hope this helps.
Who designed the form so that when user presses Enter it
allows the document to go screwy?
Well, here is the deal. Look at the document layout. Set
it up using Styles, and make sure that if tabbed columns
are needed, that entering information in the previous
column doesn't bump other text around.
Most of these problems can be eliminated using good layout
and design technique.
You're point however is a good one, but I don't believe
Word yet provides the ability of enabling or disabling the
Enter key when a user adds text. So, look at the layout.
Good forms take extensive planning to prevent these
pitfalls.
Hope this helps.