![]() ![]() This enables you to find text and cycle around the results using only two keys. If you want to find something else, press Ctrl+F again. ![]() Pressing Enter from the Find box in the Navigation pane selects the first result and pressing Enter again selects the next result (sorry, it’s no longer Ctrl+PageDown, which Word 2003 and earlier versions used for Find Next). If you habitually use Ctrl+F to find text, you’ll appreciate the ability to stick with the keyboard rather than having to reach for the mouse. If you’re a long-term user of earlier versions of Word, searching with the Navigation pane may be different from what you’re used to The Navigation pane finds as you type, highlights all occurrences in the text, and shows you snippets surrounding each result so that you can hop between them far more easily than with the old-fashioned Find Next button. The dropdown on the Find box allows access to all the options, such as wild cards, case sensitivity, find in tables, footnotes and comments, and much more. The standard Find dialog – both the ribbon-based button Home | Editing | Find, and the Ctrl+F keyboard shortcut – was eclipsed by the new Navigation pane, since there’s almost nothing in the old Find dialog that the new Navigation pane doesn’t do better.
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