Word 2016 - keep Portrait orientation of a page but have landscape-oriented table?
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I'm writing my dissertation and I have a particularly large table in the attachment section which stretches over several pages vertically and fits just about right horizontally when in landscape.
The issue is, I cannot have any pages in my dissertation in landscape. The university requires that the header and footer are present at the top and bottom part of all pages, including attachments of this kind. On display, it is top and bottom, but please bear in mind that this monstrosity will need to be printed. Once printed and bound, the section with the huge table in landscape orientation would have the header and footer on the sides as opposed to top and bottom, because the document as a whole is bound in portrait mode.
Guys, do you have any ideas how to achieve landscape table in portrait oriented page, please? I'm at a loss. The only thing I came up with is pasting it as images, but it's hell of a lot of work considering the length of it, plus I wouldn't be able to make changes later.
microsoft-word microsoft-word-2016 orientation
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I'm writing my dissertation and I have a particularly large table in the attachment section which stretches over several pages vertically and fits just about right horizontally when in landscape.
The issue is, I cannot have any pages in my dissertation in landscape. The university requires that the header and footer are present at the top and bottom part of all pages, including attachments of this kind. On display, it is top and bottom, but please bear in mind that this monstrosity will need to be printed. Once printed and bound, the section with the huge table in landscape orientation would have the header and footer on the sides as opposed to top and bottom, because the document as a whole is bound in portrait mode.
Guys, do you have any ideas how to achieve landscape table in portrait oriented page, please? I'm at a loss. The only thing I came up with is pasting it as images, but it's hell of a lot of work considering the length of it, plus I wouldn't be able to make changes later.
microsoft-word microsoft-word-2016 orientation
Potentially a lot of work, but what about redoing the table and changing the text direction to make it work? I know that's not the answer you're looking for, but might be the best way to keep the table editable.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:57
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
favorite
up vote
5
down vote
favorite
I'm writing my dissertation and I have a particularly large table in the attachment section which stretches over several pages vertically and fits just about right horizontally when in landscape.
The issue is, I cannot have any pages in my dissertation in landscape. The university requires that the header and footer are present at the top and bottom part of all pages, including attachments of this kind. On display, it is top and bottom, but please bear in mind that this monstrosity will need to be printed. Once printed and bound, the section with the huge table in landscape orientation would have the header and footer on the sides as opposed to top and bottom, because the document as a whole is bound in portrait mode.
Guys, do you have any ideas how to achieve landscape table in portrait oriented page, please? I'm at a loss. The only thing I came up with is pasting it as images, but it's hell of a lot of work considering the length of it, plus I wouldn't be able to make changes later.
microsoft-word microsoft-word-2016 orientation
I'm writing my dissertation and I have a particularly large table in the attachment section which stretches over several pages vertically and fits just about right horizontally when in landscape.
The issue is, I cannot have any pages in my dissertation in landscape. The university requires that the header and footer are present at the top and bottom part of all pages, including attachments of this kind. On display, it is top and bottom, but please bear in mind that this monstrosity will need to be printed. Once printed and bound, the section with the huge table in landscape orientation would have the header and footer on the sides as opposed to top and bottom, because the document as a whole is bound in portrait mode.
Guys, do you have any ideas how to achieve landscape table in portrait oriented page, please? I'm at a loss. The only thing I came up with is pasting it as images, but it's hell of a lot of work considering the length of it, plus I wouldn't be able to make changes later.
microsoft-word microsoft-word-2016 orientation
microsoft-word microsoft-word-2016 orientation
asked Apr 5 '17 at 16:34
Ella
2612
2612
Potentially a lot of work, but what about redoing the table and changing the text direction to make it work? I know that's not the answer you're looking for, but might be the best way to keep the table editable.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:57
add a comment |
Potentially a lot of work, but what about redoing the table and changing the text direction to make it work? I know that's not the answer you're looking for, but might be the best way to keep the table editable.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:57
Potentially a lot of work, but what about redoing the table and changing the text direction to make it work? I know that's not the answer you're looking for, but might be the best way to keep the table editable.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:57
Potentially a lot of work, but what about redoing the table and changing the text direction to make it work? I know that's not the answer you're looking for, but might be the best way to keep the table editable.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:57
add a comment |
2 Answers
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up vote
0
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You can paste the Table into a Text Box, then rotate the Text Box (answer via Quora):
Though the table will be still editable, while editing a shape that has text inside, Word resets the text temporarily to the default orientation.
Here are the steps:
Create a table. Then select all the table contents using the icon on one of the table corners. Copy the selection.
Create an empty textbox outside the table, right click on the textbox and choose “Add text”.
Paste the table you have copied inside the textbox. Note that the size of the textbox will affect how the table will look like. Unless there’s enough space inside.
Rotate the textbox(which will consequently rotate all its content including the table) using ordinary rotation icon(the green circle).
1
If the table's larger than a page you'd need a text box per page. So yes, this works, but not for huge tables like the one mentioned in the question.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:56
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
The best solution I have found:
- insert a Drawing Canvas (Menu, Insert, Illustration, Shapes, New Drawing Canvas at the bottom of the menu)
- insert a Text Box inside the canvas (Menu, Insert, Illustration, Shapes, Basic Shapes, first element: Text Box)
- copy the table and paste it inside the textbox or, better, directly create it inside the Text Box
- select and rotate the Text Box (as explained by D Schlachter in his answer)
In the text flow, a Drawing Canvas works like a figure when either is inserted in a paragraph. You can center the paragraph, add space before or after the paragraph, etc.
If the table does not fit the page, you can decrease the font. You can also play with the margins of the cells of the table.
Of course, you could make a table in Excel and copy it in Word as a figure, and rotate it. But I guess that the previous solution has a better resolution/file weight ratio.
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
You can paste the Table into a Text Box, then rotate the Text Box (answer via Quora):
Though the table will be still editable, while editing a shape that has text inside, Word resets the text temporarily to the default orientation.
Here are the steps:
Create a table. Then select all the table contents using the icon on one of the table corners. Copy the selection.
Create an empty textbox outside the table, right click on the textbox and choose “Add text”.
Paste the table you have copied inside the textbox. Note that the size of the textbox will affect how the table will look like. Unless there’s enough space inside.
Rotate the textbox(which will consequently rotate all its content including the table) using ordinary rotation icon(the green circle).
1
If the table's larger than a page you'd need a text box per page. So yes, this works, but not for huge tables like the one mentioned in the question.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:56
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
You can paste the Table into a Text Box, then rotate the Text Box (answer via Quora):
Though the table will be still editable, while editing a shape that has text inside, Word resets the text temporarily to the default orientation.
Here are the steps:
Create a table. Then select all the table contents using the icon on one of the table corners. Copy the selection.
Create an empty textbox outside the table, right click on the textbox and choose “Add text”.
Paste the table you have copied inside the textbox. Note that the size of the textbox will affect how the table will look like. Unless there’s enough space inside.
Rotate the textbox(which will consequently rotate all its content including the table) using ordinary rotation icon(the green circle).
1
If the table's larger than a page you'd need a text box per page. So yes, this works, but not for huge tables like the one mentioned in the question.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:56
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
You can paste the Table into a Text Box, then rotate the Text Box (answer via Quora):
Though the table will be still editable, while editing a shape that has text inside, Word resets the text temporarily to the default orientation.
Here are the steps:
Create a table. Then select all the table contents using the icon on one of the table corners. Copy the selection.
Create an empty textbox outside the table, right click on the textbox and choose “Add text”.
Paste the table you have copied inside the textbox. Note that the size of the textbox will affect how the table will look like. Unless there’s enough space inside.
Rotate the textbox(which will consequently rotate all its content including the table) using ordinary rotation icon(the green circle).
You can paste the Table into a Text Box, then rotate the Text Box (answer via Quora):
Though the table will be still editable, while editing a shape that has text inside, Word resets the text temporarily to the default orientation.
Here are the steps:
Create a table. Then select all the table contents using the icon on one of the table corners. Copy the selection.
Create an empty textbox outside the table, right click on the textbox and choose “Add text”.
Paste the table you have copied inside the textbox. Note that the size of the textbox will affect how the table will look like. Unless there’s enough space inside.
Rotate the textbox(which will consequently rotate all its content including the table) using ordinary rotation icon(the green circle).
answered Apr 5 '17 at 16:56
D Schlachter
1,209413
1,209413
1
If the table's larger than a page you'd need a text box per page. So yes, this works, but not for huge tables like the one mentioned in the question.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:56
add a comment |
1
If the table's larger than a page you'd need a text box per page. So yes, this works, but not for huge tables like the one mentioned in the question.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:56
1
1
If the table's larger than a page you'd need a text box per page. So yes, this works, but not for huge tables like the one mentioned in the question.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:56
If the table's larger than a page you'd need a text box per page. So yes, this works, but not for huge tables like the one mentioned in the question.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:56
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
The best solution I have found:
- insert a Drawing Canvas (Menu, Insert, Illustration, Shapes, New Drawing Canvas at the bottom of the menu)
- insert a Text Box inside the canvas (Menu, Insert, Illustration, Shapes, Basic Shapes, first element: Text Box)
- copy the table and paste it inside the textbox or, better, directly create it inside the Text Box
- select and rotate the Text Box (as explained by D Schlachter in his answer)
In the text flow, a Drawing Canvas works like a figure when either is inserted in a paragraph. You can center the paragraph, add space before or after the paragraph, etc.
If the table does not fit the page, you can decrease the font. You can also play with the margins of the cells of the table.
Of course, you could make a table in Excel and copy it in Word as a figure, and rotate it. But I guess that the previous solution has a better resolution/file weight ratio.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
The best solution I have found:
- insert a Drawing Canvas (Menu, Insert, Illustration, Shapes, New Drawing Canvas at the bottom of the menu)
- insert a Text Box inside the canvas (Menu, Insert, Illustration, Shapes, Basic Shapes, first element: Text Box)
- copy the table and paste it inside the textbox or, better, directly create it inside the Text Box
- select and rotate the Text Box (as explained by D Schlachter in his answer)
In the text flow, a Drawing Canvas works like a figure when either is inserted in a paragraph. You can center the paragraph, add space before or after the paragraph, etc.
If the table does not fit the page, you can decrease the font. You can also play with the margins of the cells of the table.
Of course, you could make a table in Excel and copy it in Word as a figure, and rotate it. But I guess that the previous solution has a better resolution/file weight ratio.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
The best solution I have found:
- insert a Drawing Canvas (Menu, Insert, Illustration, Shapes, New Drawing Canvas at the bottom of the menu)
- insert a Text Box inside the canvas (Menu, Insert, Illustration, Shapes, Basic Shapes, first element: Text Box)
- copy the table and paste it inside the textbox or, better, directly create it inside the Text Box
- select and rotate the Text Box (as explained by D Schlachter in his answer)
In the text flow, a Drawing Canvas works like a figure when either is inserted in a paragraph. You can center the paragraph, add space before or after the paragraph, etc.
If the table does not fit the page, you can decrease the font. You can also play with the margins of the cells of the table.
Of course, you could make a table in Excel and copy it in Word as a figure, and rotate it. But I guess that the previous solution has a better resolution/file weight ratio.
The best solution I have found:
- insert a Drawing Canvas (Menu, Insert, Illustration, Shapes, New Drawing Canvas at the bottom of the menu)
- insert a Text Box inside the canvas (Menu, Insert, Illustration, Shapes, Basic Shapes, first element: Text Box)
- copy the table and paste it inside the textbox or, better, directly create it inside the Text Box
- select and rotate the Text Box (as explained by D Schlachter in his answer)
In the text flow, a Drawing Canvas works like a figure when either is inserted in a paragraph. You can center the paragraph, add space before or after the paragraph, etc.
If the table does not fit the page, you can decrease the font. You can also play with the margins of the cells of the table.
Of course, you could make a table in Excel and copy it in Word as a figure, and rotate it. But I guess that the previous solution has a better resolution/file weight ratio.
edited Nov 26 at 1:34
answered Nov 26 at 1:27
Rodolfo Oviedo
886
886
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Potentially a lot of work, but what about redoing the table and changing the text direction to make it work? I know that's not the answer you're looking for, but might be the best way to keep the table editable.
– Captain Phoenix
Jun 25 at 9:57