@littlechickawan Well, the answer is I can't really remember. It may have been Word 2007 for Mac but, really, it doesn't matter because I've been doing it the same way on Mac and Windows for the last several versions of Office. There may be small differences between them but nothing of substance as far as this tutorial goes. Hope that helps.
You are just too cool. I have spent so much time fruitlessly searching for some program, or thing of the sort, to help me create a questionnaire. I am simply amazed at how you created an easy and non-threatening questionnaire using a series of simple "thingies". You are undoubtedly the maaane.
@turtle199 Sorry to not get back to you sooner but one way to do that in Word is to put the questionnaire in a table where the first column is for the questions numbers, the second column is for the answer spaces, and the third column has the questions. Then remove all borders from the table. Then, put bottom borders in each cell in the second column. That way, the line is part of the border and is not affected by text being entered in the cell.
@tjyoung82 Those are carat symbols, which are above the 6 at the top of your keyboard. They let Word know you're searching for or adding a non-character thing. ^p is for paragraph marks, ^t is for tabs, ^# is for any number, and so on. But all you have to do is hit shift-6 to get the carat and they type a p or a t.
subscribed
Naoufalitos24 3 months ago
Thanks so much! Very helpful with creating a survey for my final research/ IRB board submission :)
ntsmith311 4 months ago
how do you use check box form field ms word
venusproof 4 months ago
All my thankfulness!
- Student of Psychology -
112556 5 months ago
awesome
magentamadeline 6 months ago
thanks very useful, how about questions when you choose one answer, choose multiple answers
amirsudan1 6 months ago
Thanks for sharing this tutorial. It really was a big help. One problem. Can you pls tell what was the version you were using? I mean 2007 etc.
littlechickawan 7 months ago
@littlechickawan Well, the answer is I can't really remember. It may have been Word 2007 for Mac but, really, it doesn't matter because I've been doing it the same way on Mac and Windows for the last several versions of Office. There may be small differences between them but nothing of substance as far as this tutorial goes. Hope that helps.
Bart
bartonpoulson 7 months ago
@bartonpoulson Thanks! Yeah it did help!
littlechickawan 7 months ago
You are just too cool. I have spent so much time fruitlessly searching for some program, or thing of the sort, to help me create a questionnaire. I am simply amazed at how you created an easy and non-threatening questionnaire using a series of simple "thingies". You are undoubtedly the maaane.
KrypticXkaijin 10 months ago
@KrypticXkaijin Ah, you're so welcome! Always glad to help.
Bart
bartonpoulson 10 months ago
@KrypticXkaijin He's the best maaayne; he deeeed it... ahem. Sorry, not sure what came over me.
RH98 10 months ago
@RH98 it's all cool haha
KrypticXkaijin 9 months ago
How about lines that you can type on without the line getting bigger and/or separating ie: ___ttt___
turtle199 1 year ago
@turtle199 Sorry to not get back to you sooner but one way to do that in Word is to put the questionnaire in a table where the first column is for the questions numbers, the second column is for the answer spaces, and the third column has the questions. Then remove all borders from the table. Then, put bottom borders in each cell in the second column. That way, the line is part of the border and is not affected by text being entered in the cell.
Hope that helps!
Bart
bartonpoulson 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Asian brides so sexy *lushfmlk.info*
nbmnkjlrwewds 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Date and Russian lady ** leefoxnow.info **
xcbvxncvwerer 1 year ago
Thanks for this video. I'm trying to create a questionnaire for my field research.
How do you type what you had in the replace and find part? I can't figure it out!
tjyoung82 1 year ago
@tjyoung82 Those are carat symbols, which are above the 6 at the top of your keyboard. They let Word know you're searching for or adding a non-character thing. ^p is for paragraph marks, ^t is for tabs, ^# is for any number, and so on. But all you have to do is hit shift-6 to get the carat and they type a p or a t.
bartonpoulson 1 year ago
@bartonpoulson Thanks for the info! I can't believe I couldn't find that! :-)
tjyoung82 1 year ago
That's cool and all but you don't explain how to make any of the shorter lines (e.g. the ones after the 'How old are you?' question).
isthisok 1 year ago
@isthisok Those are underscores; just hit shift and the hypen key. I usually use 5 of them and they go together to make a single line.
bartonpoulson 1 year ago
thank you for posting this, very useful for busines and other use ;)
great explanation and knowledge ;) thanks so much for sharing ! ! !
zagreb1234 1 year ago
Many thanks for this video. It helps me to set my research instrument...^_^
iRoelSan 1 year ago