Home

How to Preview Your Word 2013 Document before Printing

|
Updated:  
2016-03-27 11:41:18
|
Word 2010 For Dummies
Explore Book
Buy On Amazon

Before you print a Word 2013 document, preview the look of the final document. Yeah, even though your document is supposed to look the same on the screen as it does on paper, you may still see surprises: missing page numbers, blank pages, screwy headers, and other jaw-dropping blunders, for example.

Preview your document on the Print screen.

Preview your document on the Print screen.

You only need to remember to peruse your document before printing it. Follow these steps:

Save your document.

Save your document.

Yep — always save. Saving before printing is a good idea.

Click the File tab.

Click the File tab.

The file screen will appear.

Choose the Print item from the left side of the File screen.

Choose the Print item from the left side of the File screen.

You see the Print screen.

Use the buttons at the bottom of the screen to page through your document.

Use the buttons at the bottom of the screen to page through your document.

You can use the Zoom control to enlarge or reduce the image. Look at the margins. If you’re using footnotes, headers, or footers, look at how they lay out. The idea is to spot anything that’s dreadfully wrong before you print.

When you’re ready, you can print the document. Basically you click the big Print button. Or when things need to be repaired, click the Back button to return to your document.

Sideways printing, paper sizes, and other document-related options are set when you format your document’s pages. These are Word functions, not ones you set when you print.

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

Dan Gookin has been writing about technology for 20 years. He has contributed articles to numerous high-tech magazines and written more than 90 books about personal computing technology, many of them accurate.
He combines his love of writing with his interest in technology to create books that are informative and entertaining, but not boring. Having sold more than 14 million titles translated into more than 30 languages, Dan can attest that his method of crafting computer tomes does seem to work.
Perhaps Dan’s most famous title is the original DOS For Dummies, published in 1991. It became the world’s fastest-selling computer book, at one time moving more copies per week than the New York Times number-one best seller (although, because it’s a reference book, it could not be listed on the NYT best seller list). That book spawned the entire line of For Dummies books, which remains a publishing phenomenon to this day.
Dan’s most recent titles include PCs For Dummies, 9th Edition; Buying a Computer For Dummies, 2005 Edition; Troubleshooting Your PC For Dummies; Dan Gookin’s Naked Windows XP; and Dan Gookin’s Naked Office. He publishes a free weekly computer newsletter, “Weekly Wambooli Salad,” and also maintains the vast and helpful Web site www.wambooli.com.