From: Ricky Martin Ricky on
I want it to be an underline, not just inserting a line. So after the text
ends, I want to be able to carry the underline to the end of that line.
From: Ricky Martin on
I spent some time researching and finally found the answer I was looking for
in a 2004 question/answer discussion groups. If you hold the Control +Shift
+Space bar the line will continue to the point you want it to stop. Or you
can tab to where you want the line to end and hit Control +Shift +Space bar.

"Ricky Martin" wrote:

> I want it to be an underline, not just inserting a line. So after the text
> ends, I want to be able to carry the underline to the end of that line.
From: Stefan Blom on
You could add a tab stop at the end of the line and then press TAB at the
end of the text. The underline formatting will be applied to the tab
character as well.

--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP



"Ricky Martin" <Ricky Martin(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:98567AE5-A24B-4FF1-AFA3-393FAC859FCE(a)microsoft.com...
>I want it to be an underline, not just inserting a line. So after the text
> ends, I want to be able to carry the underline to the end of that line.


From: Stefan Blom on
Using a tab stop would seem easier than adding multiple nonbreaking spaces
(which is what Ctrl+Shift+SpaceBar does).

--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP



"Ricky Martin" <RickyMartin(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:C7839D01-75E2-4CE1-AC85-52C756D2ADDD(a)microsoft.com...
>I spent some time researching and finally found the answer I was looking
>for
> in a 2004 question/answer discussion groups. If you hold the Control
> +Shift
> +Space bar the line will continue to the point you want it to stop. Or you
> can tab to where you want the line to end and hit Control +Shift +Space
> bar.
>
> "Ricky Martin" wrote:
>
>> I want it to be an underline, not just inserting a line. So after the
>> text
>> ends, I want to be able to carry the underline to the end of that line.