Microsoft Word has many features that might escape the attention of the casual user, one of which is the comment function. You can use comments when planning an essay or to remind yourself to check something while writing.
Alternatively, you might send a document to someone for feedback (or proofreading) and have it returned covered in little notes! But whatever the reason, knowing how to use the comment function will make you a more effective Microsoft Word user.
There are three ways to add a comment to a document. In all cases, the first thing to do is select the text you want to comment on using the cursor. After that you can:
Adding a comment via the ‘Review’ tab.
Adding a comment via the contextual menu.
Once a comment has been added, simply click it and type your note.
The ‘Show Comments’ button in the ‘Comments’ section of the ‘Review’ tab lets you control how comments are displayed: either as small speech bubble icons or in full. Clicking it once will display comments fully. Clicking it again will revert to speech bubbles.
The speech bubble option is useful if you have a lot of comments in a document, as it means they don’t become distracting. To view a comment, simply click the relevant bubble.
You can also stop comments from being displayed at all, only show comments by specific reviewers, or set comments to be shown in the main document when you hover the cursor over the relevant text. All this is done via the ‘Show Markup’ menu.
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There are several ways to interact with comments. The most basic is using the ‘Next’ and ‘Previous’ buttons to cycle between them. You can also just click on a comment to select it, of course, but using ‘Next’ and ‘Previous’ means you won’t miss one by accident.
In addition, you can either reply to a comment or mark it as read:
You can also comment on a comment on a comment. But that way madness lies.
Marking a comment as done.
Deleting a single comment is as simple as selecting it and clicking ‘Delete’ in the ‘Comments’ section of the ‘Review’ tab. Alternatively, you can right-click the comment and select ‘Delete Comment’ from the contextual menu.
Finally, if you’ve finished editing a document and want to remove every comment at once, you can click the little arrow on the ‘Delete’ button in the ‘Review’ tab and select ‘Delete All Comments in Document’ from the dropdown menu.
Make sure you’ve checked every comment before doing this, though, as you might accidentally delete something you haven’t addressed yet!
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