

- #Change acrobat for mac highlight color how to#
- #Change acrobat for mac highlight color skin#
- #Change acrobat for mac highlight color professional#
- #Change acrobat for mac highlight color windows#
Registered: Aug 15 I found, in Acrobat 8, that sometimes after I in fact select text in a text box and hit Ctrl-E, the properties bar says "no current selection. The Properties bar is acting like it's been described above!!! I can change my text box text attributes like color as I would have expected!!! Any replies are appreciated, thank you. Change the colour or remove the underline from hyperlinks in Microsoft Word
#Change acrobat for mac highlight color windows#
Plus, coming from a Mac background mac at home, windows at work, I think outside the box.
#Change acrobat for mac highlight color skin#
I'm one of those "never give up" types And there's more than one way to skin a cat. So, I checked the print settings for each. One from Excel, one from PowerPoint It's the one from Excel that doesn't want to change the Properties bar I wonder why this is? There's no difference in settings, though there are things relevant to Excel and not PowerPoint, like "Fit worksheet to a single page" and vice-versa. Is there some magical check box, somewhere that's got to be checked? All replies What could be the problem? Is it an installation issue i. There just doesn't seem to be a way to get the Properties bar to behave in the successful manner you're describing. Well, after selecting the text, the Properties bar still only has the "No current selection" message displayed.
#Change acrobat for mac highlight color how to#

According to Dimitri's answer to xrez above, I should now select the red text and the Properties toolbar should I assume change from the "No current selection" message to icons or similar indicating changes to font, font size, font color, etc.

If not, please elaborate on the common misconceptions regarding what is and what is not a text box.

#Change acrobat for mac highlight color professional#
Here's what happens: I'm running Acrobat Professional 8. If this is a big concern for you, then I'd suggest defining styles for your shading, since you can always search for specific styles.What's strange is that sometimes I'm able to change text colors in a text box, sometimes not, that's strange. One of the formatting attributes that you can search for is if the text is highlighted, but you cannot search for shading applied to text. There is only one downside that I can find to using shading to highlight text, and that has to do with Find and Replace. Or, if you prefer, you can bypass macros altogether and simply create a character style that applies the desired shading to selected text. With the macro in place, you can assign it to a shortcut key or to a toolbar button so you can apply your own "highlighting" whenever you want. BackgroundPatternColor = wdColorLightYellow ForegroundPatternColor = wdColorAutomatic The following macro applies pale yellow shading to the selected text. If you find a color you like to use a lot, you can create a macro that applies the shading to the selected text. Word then applies the selected color to the selected text, and it looks exactly like what you apply using the Highlight tool. (If you'd like to choose from more colors, click the More Colors button.) From the colors displayed, select the one you want to use.The Shading tab of the Borders and Shading dialog box. Make sure the Shading tab is displayed.Word displays the Borders and Shading dialog box. Choose Borders and Shading from the Format menu.(The colors appear to be hard-wired into Word.) You can, however, highlight text in a different way, if you prefer: by using shading. The colors used for highlighting cannot be changed beyond what is offered in the fifteen colors. Word allows you to pick any of fifteen different colors. The default color for highlighting is yellow, but you can change the color if you click the down-arrow to the right of the Highlight tool on the Formatting toolbar. Word provides a highlighter tool that allows you to.well, "highlight" text, much as you would do with a highlighter pen on a printed document.
