Try creating a bunch of font sizes and colors if Of using it as a blank page set at the font type. If you make outlines and use font sizes and colors It so that it’s constantly saved so you don’t lose it. You can save the new doc each time you’ve added to
Once the newĭocument has been saved from e.doc to the new doc Name the e.doc document before you type or changeĪnything. A quick way to get around some bothersome thingĪ. You canīegin typing and when you’re done smply, BE SURE,Ģ. Want to use already saved so when you open e.doc First the e.doc file has the text size that you Now the key to your success is two things.ġ. I make an easily selected file, a dummy file, One super way I handle my wordpad is this.ġ. This should work to keep your font size from re-setting while editing your document. When you select all first, your font size should remain at the chosen setting for the entire time that you are working on the file. This means you have not changed the font size on the entire document, and future changes to the location of your cursor in the document will take you to a location where the font size remained set to 10. When there is no text selected, the cursor disappears. As you can seem the selected area should still appear selected while you are changing the font size. Here is a picture of what you should see. If there is already text there, select all text by pressing Ctrl + A to make sure you get every active part of the document. you should see a thick selection bar instead of a cursor (and that bar should not disappear while you are changing the font size). If no text exists yet, select all by double-clicking within your text area.
You can solve the problem of the font size changing back to default by first selecting all text. The fact that it is switching back means only one thing - that you are not selecting your entire workspace (all text) before changing the font size to 12. “I use WordPad quite a lot and even when I manually change the font size it invariably switches back to a “10” in the process of writing, etc.” However, there is a way to solve your problem by changing the way you are doing things. I really don’t think you’re gonna want to know that much about your system just for a problem with WordPad. Because WordPad uses defaults set by your overall configuration rather than having its own set of defaults, you can’t change the default in WordPad permanently unless you’re a serious Windows programming wizard.