How to Split, View and Edit Two Different Parts of Your Word Document in the Same Window

© Ugur Akinci
Imagine you have footnotes at the bottom of a long MS Word page that would not fit into a single screen. How would you work in the first paragraph of that page while viewing the footnotes at the same time?
Or, in general: how would you view separate parts of your document at the same time?
MS Word 2010 offers a very useful solution to that: SPLIT button.
Here is how you do it:
1) Open your long file by selecting File > Open and browsing to the file.
2) Select the View tab.
Example:
MS_WORD_2010_Long_Document
3) Click the SPLIT button and then move the split bar up and down to where you want on the screen:
MS_WORD_2010_Long_Document_SPLIT_BAR
4) Click your cursor in the BOTTOM screen and scroll to where you want in the file. Now you can view and edit both ends of your document:
MS_WORD_2010_Long_Document_SPLIT_WNDOW
5) When you’re done, click the SPLIT button once again to remove the split bar and revert to the single-page look.

4 Comments

  1. Bruce Herman on January 27, 2012 at 5:42 pm

    How do you save the file so the split remains when the file is reopened?



    • admin on January 27, 2012 at 5:53 pm

      Bruce, I don’t think you can do that. The “Split Window” feature is not persistent between file sessions.



  2. […] This is called splitting the display. See http://www.technicalcommunicationcen…e-same-window/ […]



  3. […] —Splitting your screen can be helpful: you can work in the top part and search in the bottom part, toggling back and forth with the F6 key; or you can work in two views of the same document side by side, toggling with Control F6. […]