![]() ![]() See how the left edges of each of those columns lines up? Those are left tabs. This results in the left edges of your tab stops being aligned (if you’re using tabs to, say, type in columnar data), like so: With regular tabs, you’re moving the cursor over and beginning your typing at that point. I typed the date, set up the right tab, and started typing the amount at the right-hand margin. See that right-pointing arrow between the date and the dollar amount (I’ve got Show/Hide turned on so you can see the codes)? That’s a right tab I set up at the 6.5″ mark (on an 8.5″ wide sheet of paper with 1″ margins on both sides, 6.5″ would be the right margin). ![]() And because there’s always (okay, almost always) more than one way to accomplish the same goal in any Microsoft Office application, here’s another alternative: Right Tabs: Easy-peasy … if you know how.īut not everyone’s comfortable with Tables in Word. The left column is left-justified, and the right column is right-justified. Pretty straightforward if you’re use to Tables in Microsoft Word. Here, I’ll turn on the gridlines (on the Table Tools | Layout tab that comes up whenever your cursor is in a table) and show you: For me, tables make a lot of alignment issues a lot easier. I usually accomplish this trick (having left- and right-justified text on the same line) in Microsoft Word with Tables. Ever have a document that needs to have a paragraph like this? ![]()
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