S
Suzanne S. Barnhill
No, the language of the document may differ from the language that has been
set as the Word default, but the language of any given text is just the
language that is applied; there is no way to set the default language of a
given document: all you can do is select text (all or some of it) and set a
specific language that will be applied to it. The language at the insertion
point can vary, but it varies only from the text around it, not from any set
standard for the document.
This is quibbling, of course, but I think that implying that there is a
"set" or default language for a document is deceptive because a different
language can ride in on a single pasted character and spread like wildfire
if you continue typing from that point. Moreover, I'm not sure that these
unwanted language settings can be removed even by selecting text and
pressing Ctrl+Spacebar (though this *should* work); one must be constantly
vigilant and periodically select all the text and reapply the desired
language setting.
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
http://word.mvps.org
Once you've set the language, it becomes the set language -- you can
watch the pot, but "a watched pot never boils." It's just a quirk of
the word "set" and a few others that the past participle (adjectival)
form is the same as the basic verb form.
The actual language of the document (for instance, English) can differ
from the Set Language of the document -- and you might not notice
until you type quotation marks and get guillemets or a pair of commas
(French and German behavior respectively), or a (semi)colon and get a
nonbreaking space before it (French).
set as the Word default, but the language of any given text is just the
language that is applied; there is no way to set the default language of a
given document: all you can do is select text (all or some of it) and set a
specific language that will be applied to it. The language at the insertion
point can vary, but it varies only from the text around it, not from any set
standard for the document.
This is quibbling, of course, but I think that implying that there is a
"set" or default language for a document is deceptive because a different
language can ride in on a single pasted character and spread like wildfire
if you continue typing from that point. Moreover, I'm not sure that these
unwanted language settings can be removed even by selecting text and
pressing Ctrl+Spacebar (though this *should* work); one must be constantly
vigilant and periodically select all the text and reapply the desired
language setting.
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
http://word.mvps.org
Once you've set the language, it becomes the set language -- you can
watch the pot, but "a watched pot never boils." It's just a quirk of
the word "set" and a few others that the past participle (adjectival)
form is the same as the basic verb form.
The actual language of the document (for instance, English) can differ
from the Set Language of the document -- and you might not notice
until you type quotation marks and get guillemets or a pair of commas
(French and German behavior respectively), or a (semi)colon and get a
nonbreaking space before it (French).