- #HOW TO EDIT IN WORD AND RETAIN THE CORRECTIONS HOW TO#
- #HOW TO EDIT IN WORD AND RETAIN THE CORRECTIONS MAC#
Track changes 2 – customising Track Changes Track changes 1 – why use it, where can you find it, what can you do with it?
#HOW TO EDIT IN WORD AND RETAIN THE CORRECTIONS HOW TO#
This is part of my series on how to avoid time-consuming “short cuts” and use Word in the right way to maximise your time and improve the look of your documents. I bear no responsibility for any pickles you might get yourself into! Always save a copy of your document before manipulating it.
#HOW TO EDIT IN WORD AND RETAIN THE CORRECTIONS MAC#
Mac compatible versions of Word should have similar options. Please note, these hints work with versions of Microsoft Word currently in use – Word 2007, Word 2010 and Word 2013 all for PC. If so, please share using the buttons below or pop a comment on! This is another one written when I had a specific need and had to go hunting around, so I hope you’ve found it useful. Now we can see all of the changes suggested by LB as well as the comments by both people. To see and review the suggestions made in blue by me, we go back to Review tab – Track Changes area – Show Markup – Reviewers and re-tick by the LB: Now all of the insertions and deletions have been accepted and we’re left with just the comment balloon: Then, we choose Accept All Changes Shown (note, Accept All Changes will accept all of the changes, red or blue, visible or hidden: we don’t want that):
We can accept these changes by choosing Review tab – Track Changes area and clicking on the arrow at the bottom of the Accept button. Now we can just see Laura’s changes in red. This gives us the option to tick or untick by each individual reviewer.
In the Review tab, Track Changes area, click on Show Markup then Reviewers. I want to view and accept the red changes made by Laura, then view my own ones in blue to review them (Yes, if you’re reading this all the way through, Word 2010 and Word 2013 chose the opposite colours for the two reviewers).įirst we need to view only the blue corrections in order to accept only those ones. Here is our text commented on and corrected by two people. How do I see and accept one reviewer’s changes in Word 2013? Now I can see the corrections in red and all of the comment boxes, and review them happily. Just to prove that my corrections are still there, and in case I want to review those, we can view all reviewers by going back to Review – Track Changes – Show Markup – Reviewers and clicking in the box to tick LB: Now all of the blue changes have been accepted and only the comment by L is visible. In the Review tab, Track Changes, I click on the arrow at the bottom of the Accept button and click Accept All Changes Shown (it’s important to pick this one – if I chose Accept All Changes in Document, all of the changes, hidden and visible, would be accepted). We only see comments and corrections by Laura, but the ones made by LB will still be there behind the scenes. Note that the red comment box has also disappeared. Once I’ve done that, I can only see the blue corrections. So I click on the tick box by the LB initials, to un-tick that box and only see Laura’s corrections: IN this case, I want to interact with just the changes made in blue – the ones I want to accept. This allows you to tick or un-tick by different names.
Click on the arrow next to Show Markup and then Reviewers on the drop-down menu. We do this in the Review tab, Track Changes area. What I want to do is accept the changes made in blue and just end up with the ones in red to review.įirst of all, we need to show only one reviewer’s corrections. Here’s our text, with comments and corrections by two reviewers, shown in two colours. Note, it looks slightly different in Word 2007/2010 and Word 2013, with subtly different terminology, so we’ll look at 2007-2010 first and then 2013 How do I see and accept one reviewer’s changes in Word 2007 and Word 2010? Because the document looked really messy and confusing, I wanted to accept all of my changes and just work with the author’s additions and amendments. They hadn’t accepted my initial changes, but had told me in the email that they were OK. Recently, I worked on a document where I made all of my usual changes or comments, then the author responded and sent it back to me for re-checking. Why would I want to accept only one reviewer’s changes in Track Changes? Once you can see the changes made by one editor or reviewer, you can delete the changes made by that one reviewer, leaving only the changes made by the other reviewers. This article tells you how to view just one reviewer’s changes in Track Changes in Word (the screenshots are for Word 2010 and Word 2013 separately but this works for all version of Word, including Word 2003 and Word 2007).