- #WORD EQUATION EDITOR SHORTCUTS 2010 HOW TO#
- #WORD EQUATION EDITOR SHORTCUTS 2010 UPDATE#
- #WORD EQUATION EDITOR SHORTCUTS 2010 PLUS#
#WORD EQUATION EDITOR SHORTCUTS 2010 PLUS#
Some of these have a placeholder only for the integrand, some for the integrand plus lower limit, some for the integrand plus lower plus upper limits. For example, provides a number of integration palettes. They provide place holders for entering information. The second row of palette buttons are template palettes. To select an item from a symbol palette, click on the palette button, and then click on the desired character. The two rightmost symbol palettes are (1) the lower case Greek letters, and (2) the upper case Greek letters.
The symbols printed on the buttons provide a clue to the characters available under each button. There are 10 symbol palettes, the entire top row of buttons. Brackets that will "grow" must be selected from the appropriate template). (Parentheses, brackets and braces can be entered from the keyboard, but these are fixed in size. All keyboard characters can be entered directly. To enter the equation, just start typing. From now on, clicking on that button will insert an equation. Click and drag the button beside Equation Editor (a square root symbol with an alpha in it) to the toolbar.Select Insert on the left and then Equation Editor on the right.Click on the Commands tab if it is not already selected. right clicking on the tool bar (or opening the Tools menu) and choosing Customize.If you are entering many equations, you may find it convenient to have an "Insert Equation" button right on the toolbar. Putting an equation button on the tool bar In-place editing is the default, but it is possible to make window editing the default.
#WORD EQUATION EDITOR SHORTCUTS 2010 UPDATE#
This is much easier for entering equations.
#WORD EQUATION EDITOR SHORTCUTS 2010 HOW TO#
Learning how to use the equation editorĪ complete description about using the equation editor is available under " Help" in the equation editor window. Some PowerPoint specific notes can be found at the end of this document. Using the equation editor that comes with Microsoft Word, equations can be inserted into Word, PowerPoint, or any application that supports Object Linking and Embedding (OLE).Īlthough most of this document provides instructions pertaining to Word, the procedures for inserting and editing equations in Word are the same as for PowerPoint.