Try it in a document with a substantial table of contents, or several linked spreadsheet tables from Excel, or a couple of large linked images, or some other fields that generate content that takes up a lot of space.
It toggles between displaying fields and displaying field results. Where a page starts and ends is constantly changing as the user adds or deletes content and as the user changes how the document is viewed.Īs one demonstration of how fluid is the concept of a 'page', try doing Alt-F9. If you change the printer driver, so that the new one can fit just a tiny bit more or less text on the page than the previous driver, then all the pagination will change. It uses information from the printer driver to know where to chop up its precious scroll if it were required to force it on to individual bits of paper. Word paginates a document by constantly talking to the current printer driver. Each document is one long scroll of text. I'd like to cycle through all the pages in my Word document and on each page.
Selecting or referring to a page in the Word object model