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I use OneNote in law school. I type up case briefs before class and then put the day's notes on a new page. I want to move between pages within the notebook without having to click back and forth between the page I'm writing on and the tab for another page. Is there a keystroke that will do this?
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Ctrl+Scroll Up/Down with the mousewheel is the only shortcut I'm aware of for moving between pages in a section in ON2007.
-- Regards
John Waller
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jblee wrote:
[Quoted Text] > I use OneNote in law school. I type up case briefs before class and > then put the day's notes on a new page. I want to move between > pages within the notebook without having to click back and forth > between the page I'm writing on and the tab for another page. Is > there a keystroke that will do this?
You may make use *Hyperlinks* for linking pages. This would not mean one keystroke, but simply "one click".
Rainald
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CTRL+PG UP and CTRL+PG DN move up and down, respectively.
-- Thanks, John Guin OneNote Test Team http://blogs.msdn.com/johnguin
"Rainald Taesler" wrote:
[Quoted Text] > jblee wrote: > > > I use OneNote in law school. I type up case briefs before class and > > then put the day's notes on a new page. I want to move between > > pages within the notebook without having to click back and forth > > between the page I'm writing on and the tab for another page. Is > > there a keystroke that will do this? > > You may make use *Hyperlinks* for linking pages. > This would not mean one keystroke, but simply "one click". > > Rainald >
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[Quoted Text] > CTRL+PG UP and CTRL+PG DN move up and down, respectively.
Thanks John.
Any reason why that's not listed here?:
Keyboard shortcuts for Microsoft Office OneNote 2007 http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/onenote/HA100602321033.aspx
That's where I looked in vain for the answer before posting my original reply in this thread.
-- Regards
John Waller
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I'll let our documentation people know.
Thanks for pointing this out!
-- Thanks, John Guin OneNote Test Team http://blogs.msdn.com/johnguin
"John Waller" wrote:
[Quoted Text] > > CTRL+PG UP and CTRL+PG DN move up and down, respectively. > > Thanks John. > > Any reason why that's not listed here?: > > Keyboard shortcuts for Microsoft Office OneNote 2007 > http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/onenote/HA100602321033.aspx> > That's where I looked in vain for the answer before posting my original > reply in this thread. > > > -- > Regards > > John Waller >
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On Tue, 21 Oct 2008 13:47:01 -0700, jblee <jblee[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
[Quoted Text] >I use OneNote in law school. I type up case briefs before class and then put >the day's notes on a new page. I want to move between pages within the >notebook without having to click back and forth between the page I'm writing >on and the tab for another page. Is there a keystroke that will do this?
I'll second Rainald's recommendation to use hyperlinks. Here's an example of how I use them:
I'm a shortwave listener. Every month I get a copy of Monitoring Times in PDF format. It contains detailed information about who is scheduled to broadcast when and on what frequencies.
I use Adobe Reader to select the text content on those pages and move them to a text editor. Once it's there, I clean it up a little (unfortunately, the page numbers and some other junk gets copied with the rest of the data on each page) and cut out unwanted line breaks, that sort of thing. After that, it gets pasted into a OneNote page.
The data is in chronological order by scheduled broadcast start time, and grouped by hour (in UTC/GMT time). So I set up a series of items at the top of the page, such as 0000, 0100, 0200 and so on. I then navigate to the 0000 portion of the data, right-click on the first line of that section, and select "Copy hyperlink to this paragraph." Then I go back to the top of the page, select the 0000 entry, then right-click and select "Hyperlink...". I paste in the hyperlink I copied and click OK. Repeat the process for the 0100 data, the 0200 data, and so forth through 2300.
When it's all done, and I want to know who's on later when I'm listening, I can simply bring up the page, check the clock to see what time it is (in UTC), click on the 0600 link (assuming it's 0600, of course) and go right to the broadcast schedule for the 0600-0700 period.
I should probably do a video about this, and I'm considering writing it up for submission to one or two of the shortwave magazines I read.
Hope this helps.
//Steve//
Steve Silverwood, KB6OJS Email: kb6ojs[ at ]arrl.net Web: http://kb6ojs.com
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