

This will open a Navigation menu to the left. To open the Find function, use the shortcut Ctrl+F or navigate to Home>Editing>Find. Simply finding where a word is used in a document is faster with the Find function. You can also find words with the Find function. In Find and Replace, some of these characters can also be things like “any digit” or “any letter.”

Special refers to special characters, or characters that are not on the typical keyboard. For example, this search finds all instances of the word mobile and applies bold and green formatting: (Leave the Find field blank and choose a formatting style to find all occurrences of that formatting.) Similarly, choosing a formatting style for the Replace field will replace the Find term with whatever is in the Replace field with the Replace formatting. When a formatting style is selected for Find, the Find term must have that formatting to be found. This procedure works the same as clicking Find Next repeatedly, and it is just. To find the next occurrence, I press Shift+F4. When the first occurrence is displayed, I press the Esc key (or click on Cancel).

Click the Format button to select from a variety of formatting options such as Font, Paragraph, and so on. Use the Find feature as normal ( Ctrl+F ), specifying what I want to search for and then looking for the first occurrence of the string. For example, checking the Match case button and then searching for “Fishing Goods” will find “Fishing Goods” but NOT “fishing goods” or “Fishing goods.” If the Match case box is unchecked, then searching for “Fishing Goods” will find “Fishing Goods” and “fishing goods” and “Fishing goods” and so on. If the Match case box is checked, then Find and Replace becomes case-sensitive. Case is whether a letter is uppercase or lowercase. Lets click the X now in the search field to clear our search criteria, and use a keyboard shortcut.
