Tue Office TaskPane kan du ikke røre ved som jeg ser det, den er født hos MS
men du dan da lige se hvad OfficeXP inside out siger om problemet.
Using the Task Panes in Office Applications
The new Office application task panes can—or must—be used to execute many of
the commands discussed in this book. You will find them in all the major
Office applications. A task pane is a Web-style area that you can either
dock along the right or left edge of the window or float anywhere on the
screen. It displays information, commands, and controls for choosing options
(check boxes, buttons, lists, and so on). Like links on a Web page, the
commands on a task pane are highlighted in blue text, they are underlined
when you move the mouse pointer over them, and you run them with a single
click (see Figure 4-5). (Ikke vist)
Figure 4-5. The New Document task pane is shown here displayed on the right
side of a Word window.
Although a task pane takes up a lot of space on the screen and adds to the
many different ways to perform tasks, it has some unique advantages over a
dialog box—primarily that you can easily work with a task pane and with your
document at the same time. A task pane doesn't cover your work, nor does it
require that you close it before resuming other tasks. It's especially
valuable for performing fairly complex jobs, such as creating form letters
in Word or searching for files using multiple criteria.
A task pane pops up automatically when you perform certain tasks—for
example, when you choose File, New to create a new document. To display a
task pane at any time, choose View, Task Pane (if available). Or, use any of
the standard methods for displaying a toolbar, namely:
Choose View, Toolbars, Task Pane.
Right-click the menu bar or any toolbar and choose Task Pane from the
shortcut menu.
You then need to navigate to the particular task pane you want to work with.
You can display any of the main task panes that are available by clicking
the down arrow near the upper right corner of the pane that's displayed
initially, and then choosing the name of the pane you want to open from the
drop-down menu, as shown here:
(Some subsidiary task panes can be displayed only by clicking a command in
another pane. For example, you can display the Advanced Search task pane
only by selecting the Advanced Search command in the Search pane.)
You can navigate among the task panes you have recently displayed by
clicking the Back and Forward Web-style buttons, as shown here:
Each task pane contains a set of related commands. The particular panes that
are available depend on the Office application you are running. However,
most applications provide the following standard panes:
New for creating and opening documents. The actual title of the task pane
varies by application; for example in Word it's the New Document pane and in
Excel it's the New Workbook pane.
Clipboard for working with the enhanced Office Clipboard.
Search for finding files or Outlook items.
This task pane is discussed in "Creating a Document Using the New Document
Task Pane." The enhanced Office Clipboard is covered in "Using the Enhanced
Office Clipboard Task Pane." The Search task pane is explained in "Finding
Office Files or Outlook Items Using the Search Feature."
NOTE
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
Outlook has only the Clipboard task pane.
> > Nej men hvad kunne du ønske dig hvis du kunne?
>
> Jeg havde en lille ide omat bruge en TaskPane i stedet for en userform.
> Da denne skal være fremme, mens brugeren fortager nogle valg og jeg kan
godt
> lide den måde en taskpane placere sig på, da brugeren kan se hele
> dokumentet.
>
> Hilsen
> Tue
Som du kan se skulle der vist ikke være meget at tage fejl af
Glædelig jul, Finn
|