I must be doing something wrong so these are the steps I have been using:
- I place the cursor at the end of a sentence and mouse on
Insert/Picture/From file
and select the picture. and use the Insert button. Please note I do NOT
have the box checked that says "Treat picture layers as separate
objects" but the picture shows up in the word document.
- The picture is usually too large so I select the picture as an object
and use the upper right corner marker to resize the picture to about
what I need.
- While he picture is still selected, I right-click and then select
Format Picture and go to the sub panel called Layout. I have tried both
the Square and the Tight options.
This is where I then get in trouble trying to place the picture in the
right place in the document. Sometimes it is on the wrong page and I
cannot seem to drag it to another page. When I try it jumps to the top
of the page then I cannot move it down over other objects.
I deleted several then tried to insert them one at time and they then
got all jumbled and our of order.
Help! What am I doing wrong
aRKay
arkay at qsl.net
> This is where I then get in trouble trying to place the picture in the
> right place in the document. Sometimes it is on the wrong page and I
> cannot seem to drag it to another page. When I try it jumps to the top
> of the page then I cannot move it down over other objects.
I've always foundimage placement in Word (Mac or Windows) to be
extremely buggy. The only way I ever got some success with it is by
going to the advanced placement options and making sure that I had no
lock anchor, that the image would not be moved with the text and that
the alignements were relative to margins - not columns (which is usually
the default).
Corentin
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I would think the easiest thing to do would be to keep the picture "in line
with text" which basically means it acts like a text letter and you can do
just about the same things with it. Which also means you can't wrap text
around them, so that's a little annoying--all your pix are centered on their
own line, doesn't look that good. That's the default setting that pix insert
as anyhow.
All the other settings put the picture into the drawing layer and make it a
floating image. When selected, floating images have white boxes denoting
corners--inline images have a black line and black boxes at the corners.
Floating images are the ones that do all sorts of weird movements and won't
stay in place. Inline images act like a great big unbreakable chunk of
text.
If you need the pictures to float, so that you can wrap text around them, I
would still strongly suggest that you leave them in line with text *until*
all the other editing is done. Keeping them inline should make it easier to
keep them in order. Once the pic is in approximately the right place, change
the layout setting (one by one, from beginning to end), and then use
Corentin's advice if necessary. Ideally, at that point, you're done with
editing and nothing further happens that would cause the image to move.
(Save to PDF, quick!)
Possibly some useful info:
http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/DrwGrphcs/InlineVsFloating.htm
(hit refresh a few times in Safari, or use a different browser)
http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/DrwGrphcs/DrawLayer.htm
(hit refresh a few times in Safari, or use a different browser)
(written for Win but still true)
--
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Turn on the Show/Hide formatting tool and be sure you're in Page Layout
view. Click on the picture to select it. You will now see an anchor icon
to the left of the paragraph that the picture is anchored to. So, if you
want to move the picture to another page, you need to move the anchor as
well. Just click and drag it to the paragraph you want the picture anchored
to. This method will help keep images where you want them.
Formatting pictures as "inline with text" is even more secure (if not as
aesthetically pleasing) since the picture becomes a fixed object, just as if
you typed a character.
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Beth Rosengard
MacOffice MVP
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On 10/27/05 12:01 PM, in article
REMOVEarkay-2B86...@newsclstr02.news.prodigy.com, "aRKay"
> Unless a picture is formatted as "Inline with text", it's a floating object
> (as Daiya explained). This means that the picture is anchored to a
> particular paragraph and in order to move it to a different page, you need
> to move its anchor as well. When I say "anchor", I'm speaking literally.
Well you can also have the image floating without anchor and define its
position on the page (using either the default "left", "right", "center"
locations or more precisely throught he advanced options).
Without the anchor, the image can be positioned relatively to the page
regardless of what paragraph is flowing around it.
It's pretty convenient, but it triggers a couple of (known and reported)
bugs in Word that make the image jump all over the place (really) unless
you make sure the image is aligned to margins and not columns.
>> Unless a picture is formatted as "Inline with text", it's a floating object
>> (as Daiya explained). This means that the picture is anchored to a
>> particular paragraph and in order to move it to a different page, you need
>> to move its anchor as well. When I say "anchor", I'm speaking literally.
>
> Well you can also have the image floating without anchor and define its
> position on the page (using either the default "left", "right", "center"
> locations or more precisely throught he advanced options).
> Without the anchor, the image can be positioned relatively to the page
> regardless of what paragraph is flowing around it.
Even if you specify alignment using either left/right/center or any of the
other advanced options, a floating picture will still be anchored to a
paragraph and will show the anchor icon in the margin of the document.
What's more, if you position the picture using, say, right alignment and
then manually move it somewhere else, the layout dialog will now show the
alignment as "other" and whatever advanced settings you used will reflect
the repositioning. IOW, if it's floating, it's floating and it *will* be
anchored somewhere :-). In order to make a picture keep it's alignment,
you'd have to make it "inline with text" and put it on its own
line/paragraph.
Beth
Thank you and the others for the tip. The tip at
http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/DrwGrphcs/InlineVsFloating.htm
really helped. I was using he wrong option and I was not in the
Advanced panel's text wrapping options
The document is history of the cars I have owned with pictures. I have
spent way too much money on cars. HiHi
They are better behaved tonight.
aRKay
In article <BF869431.4E6A0%daiya...@mvps.org.INVALID>,
> IOW, if it's floating, it's floating and it *will* be
> anchored somewhere :-).
Yeah, it's kinda true... The image is indeed anchored to a paragraph,
though it can be placed 2 paragraphs before or after. The logical thing
for the UI would have been to anchor it to the page though, but that's
not an option.
:-\
> Beth Rosengard <bethro...@earthlink.net> wrote:
>
>> IOW, if it's floating, it's floating and it *will* be
>> anchored somewhere :-).
>
> Yeah, it's kinda true... The image is indeed anchored to a paragraph,
> though it can be placed 2 paragraphs before or after. The logical thing
> for the UI would have been to anchor it to the page though, but that's
> not an option.
> :-\
...because there's no such thing as a page in Word...
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MVP MacOffice
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