 Okay, let's see if we can have some fun in Word now making some graph paper out of the simple tools of the drawing toolbar. So first of all I'm going to select all the objects and press delete, should get rid of it nicely. Okay, I'm going to use the insert tool here and insert a shape and the shape I'm going to put in is a simple straight line. Now if you do a straight line it could be in any direction at all which isn't necessarily what we want. Whereas if I do insert, shape, straight line and press the shift key you'll see that the line goes in a nice direction, so I think they're 22.5 degree, so there we are. Alright, now one of the real secrets of Word is if I press control and D I get a duplicate of this line. Now how does that line actually work? It means it goes up and up and left and left so it's two to the right and two down but two watts. Well they're all set up in the align menu here, the grid settings and here it is 0.25 centimeter either way. Okay, let's go up and to the left what I'd really like to do is to have it just down one spacing and as I said if you look at the grid setting that is 0.25 centimeter. So that means that's perfect just what I want but now see what happens when I press control D again. It has remembered magically the setting that I've just given it. So we do this lots of times we can end up by producing lots and lots of light. Now if you're a music teacher you simply do that five times and you've got five lines and spaces. Right, the last one I'm going to go to the drawing thing which should give me different things up here, here we are and this is the color but also in the color hiding away here is the weight of it. So if I make it just a little bit heavier than the other one, perhaps two and a quarter, there we've got one heavy line. Now let's do control D once again. Control followed by D, that's going to duplicate it again so I just do left, left, up, up. Now if I do one, two, three, four I know that's one centimeter because I've gone four steps. So now I do control D because control D is now my slave and it will do exactly what I'll ask it to. Perfect. Look at that. Alright, now let's do some lines the other way. Don't forget to put shift down so that the line is a nice line and it'll snap nicely to what we've got there. So now I'm going to do control D again and it's going two to the right and two down so I want to go up, up, up, up and then left. Now I do control D lots of times and I get to all the other lines. I'm going to get to the end, I'm going to make that one heavier just like I did the first lot. There we go. So we now go to the drawing thing and down here and wait and two and a quarter. Marvelous. Control D once again will make it two down, two to the right, two down so now I go left, left, left, left and now I know these are centimetre squares. Perfect. So control D will give me a long line. Now if it's my lucky day this will just work out nicely. Look at that. Record it for everybody to see that it's dead easy to get it just right. And then we have our graph paper which we can happily select by just dragging around it and we can change its colour to something sort of graphified. That will do nicely and there we have graph paper. On which you can draw all sorts of things but I think that's for another day. But there it is and if you can save that, fine, whether that's any better than just reaching into the draw and grabbing a piece of paper, who knows. But there we are, graph paper in word.