Removing unwanted border lines in Word
In recent versions of Word, it is easy to create horizontal lines by accident. Unfortunately, it can be difficult to figure out just how to remove them.
How to remove boundary box around text box? Phil Rose over 8 years ago. Hi all, it seems like this much be simple. I have a text box and I find the fact that CDR.
The horizontal lines, which are paragraph borders, can appear if the “automatic borders” option is enabled in AutoCorrect and if you press one of the key combinations that triggers borders (three hyphens, three equal signs, or three underscore lines, followed immediately by the Enter key). If you want to insert a horizontal line quickly, the feature can be very useful. However, if you’re not aware of the way that the feature works, you can end up with an unwanted border line that is somewhat tricky to delete.
Sometimes, selecting the line and pressing the Delete key will remove the line. That doesn’t always work, however.
- When you insert a text box in your document, Word automatically places a border around it. This is great for some document designs, but you may prefer to remove the border. To remove the border from a text box, follow these steps: Either click on the border of the text box or position the insertion point within the text box.
- A variation on Mr. J’s answer: insert a text box, remove the border, then insert a horizontal line by typing -(three dashes) followed by Enter. If there’s too much white space above the line, select the paragraph above the line and shrink it –– Ctrl+.
- If you’re using Word 2007 or Word 2010, navigate to the Home tab, Paragraph group, click the drop-down to the right of the Borders button (the icon at the right side of the bottom row in the Paragraph group), and click “No Border.” If you’re using Word 2002 or Word 2003, locate the Borders drop-down in the Formatting toolbar, click it.
If not, try displaying the non-printing characters[1] (click the paragraph symbol, located in the Paragraph group on the Home tab in Word 2007 and Word 2010 and located in the Standard toolbar in Word 2002 and 2003; alternatively, press Ctrl Shift * [asterisk]) and then delete the paragraph symbol immediately above the line or the one immediately below the line. (If Word inserts the line as a “bottom” paragraph border, deleting the paragraph symbol above the line should work; if Word inserts the line as a “top” paragraph border, deleting the paragraph symbol below the line should work.)
Usually, that method will remove the line. But what if it doesn’t?
There are a few other possible solutions. With the non-printing characters displayed, select the line, as well as both the paragraph symbol above the line and the paragraph symbol below the line. Then do one of the following:
(1) Click the “No Border” icon.
If you’re using Word 2007 or Word 2010, navigate to the Home tab, Paragraph group, click the drop-down to the right of the Borders button (the icon at the right side of the bottom row in the Paragraph group), and click “No Border.” If you’re using Word 2002 or Word 2003, locate the Borders drop-down in the Formatting toolbar, click it, then click the “No Border” icon. (If doing so moves the border up, click the paragraph symbol above then line, then click the “No Border” icon again.)
(2) Clear the formatting.
After you’ve selected the line and the paragraph symbols above and below it, you can clear the formatting. Note that doing so could remove any styles you have applied to text immediately above or below the line, so use this method only if that is an acceptable result.
(a) To clear the formatting of selected text in Word 2007 or Word 2010, you can do any of the following:
(i) click the “Clear Formatting” button at the top right side of the Font group on the Home tab; or
(ii) click the dialog launcher in the Styles group on the Home tab, and when the Styles Pane opens, navigate to the top and click “Clear All”; or
(iii) click the Normal style in the Styles Pane (or in the QuickStyle gallery); or
(iv) press Ctrl Q to remove all paragraph formatting from the selected portion of the document; or
(v) press Ctrl Shift N to apply the Normal paragraph style (this method will strip out styles that have been applied to the selected text).
Remove Border From Text Box Word 2010
(b) To clear the formatting of selected text in Word 2002 or Word 2003, you can do any of the following:
(i) click the Edit menu, Clear, Formats; or
(ii) click the Format menu, Styles and Formatting, and when the Styles and Formatting Pane opens, navigate to the top and click “Clear Formatting”; or
(iii) click the Normal style in the Styles and Formatting Pane; or
(iv) press Ctrl Q to remove all paragraph formatting from the selected portion of the document; or
Box Border Word 2016
(v) press Ctrl Shift N to apply the Normal paragraph style (this method will strip out styles that have been applied to the selected text).
Once you have removed the border line, you might decide you’d like to disable the automatic borders feature permanently. Here’s how:
In Word 2007, click the Office button, Word Options, Proofing, and click the “AutoCorrect Options” button. Click the AutoFormat As You Type tab, click to uncheck “Border lines,” click “OK,” and click “OK” again to save your settings.
In Word 2010, click the File tab, Options, Proofing, and click the “AutoCorrect Options” button. Click the AutoFormat As You Type tab, click to uncheck “Border lines,” click “OK,” and click “OK” again to save your settings.
In Word 2002 or 2003, click the Tools menu, “AutoCorrect Options” (not “Options”) and click the AutoFormat As You Type tab. Click to uncheck “Border lines,” and click “OK” to save your settings.
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[1] To hide the non-printing characters, either click the paragraph symbol again or press Ctrl Shift * (asterisk) again — it’s a toggle.
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WordFirst, let's not confuse borders with gridlines. The rule of thumb is that borders print, and gridlines do not. This is true in Word and Excel, and probably many other Windows applications.
Gridlines, which are viewable and do not print (unless specifically set to print), can be viewed by choosing, from the menu, TableShow Gridlines. When you are already viewing gridlines, then the same menu option changes and Show Gridlines is not available, but Hide Gridlines is.
Gridlines appear gray. If your gridlines appear to print, then they're likely gray-colored borders.
Some borders and gridlines information:
Remove Border From Text Box Word Doc
You cannot remove gridlines. You can only choose to view them or not.
You cannot turn gridlines off for other users. Viewing of gridlines is a machine setting, it is not a document setting. When you send your document to others, you cannot control whether they see your table gridlines or not.
You can turn off all borders in a table by clicking inside the table and hitting Ctrl+Alt+U, or click inside the table and (from the menu) choose TableSelectTable, then FormatBorders and Shading, click on the Borders tab and choose None.