Creating & Editing Tables
Tables are essential tools for organizing complex data and presenting information clearly to your audience. Whether you're working with existing tabbed content or building from the ground up, mastering these techniques will streamline your workflow and enhance document professionalism.
Converting Tabbed Text into a Table
Select the tabbed text you want to convert. Ensure your data is properly separated with consistent tab characters for optimal results.
Navigate to Table > Convert Text to Table.
A dialog box will appear with text-to-table conversion options. The default settings typically work well for standard tabbed data—simply click OK to proceed.
Your newly created table is now ready for styling and refinement. You can immediately begin formatting cells, adjusting column widths, and applying visual treatments.
This conversion method is particularly valuable when working with imported data from spreadsheets or legacy documents that need professional table formatting.
Text to Table Conversion Process
Select Tabbed Text
Highlight the text that contains tab-separated data you want to convert into a table format
Access Conversion Tool
Navigate to Table menu and select Convert Text to Table option to open the conversion dialog
Apply Conversion
Review the conversion options in the dialog window and click OK to transform your text into a structured table
Converting tabbed text preserves your existing data structure while instantly providing table formatting capabilities and styling options.
Creating a Table from Scratch
Position your text cursor
precisely where you want to insert the table within your document layout.Go to Table > Insert Table.
Specify the number of desired Rows and Columns based on your content requirements, then click OK.
NOTE: Understanding row types is crucial for professional document design. Body Rows contain your standard content, while Header and Footer rows serve specialized functions—they automatically repeat when tables span multiple text frames or pages. This ensures consistent labeling and summary information throughout lengthy documents. Header rows appear at the top of each frame segment, while Footer rows anchor at the bottom, maintaining visual continuity and reader orientation.
Begin entering your content into the table cells. Consider your information hierarchy and how data relationships will be most clearly communicated to readers.
Building tables from scratch gives you complete control over structure and allows you to plan optimal data presentation from the outset.
Manual Table Creation Workflow
Position Cursor
Place your text cursor at the exact location where you want the new table to appear in your document
Insert Table
Access Table menu and select Insert Table to open the table creation dialog with dimension options
Configure Dimensions
Specify the number of rows and columns needed for your table layout and confirm with OK
Add Content
Enter your desired content into each table cell, utilizing the structure you've created
Row Type Comparison
| Feature | Body Rows | Header/Footer Rows |
|---|---|---|
| Behavior | Static content | Repeating content |
| Usage | Regular data | Labels and totals |
| Multi-frame | Appears once | Repeats in each frame |
Tips for Working with Tables
Navigate efficiently between cells using Tab to move forward, Shift–Tab to move backward, or the arrow keys for directional movement. This keyboard navigation maintains your workflow momentum without constant mouse repositioning.
To select an entire column, position your cursor at the top of the column until the down arrow
appears, then click once. This technique is essential for applying consistent formatting across vertical data sets.To select an entire row, position your cursor at the left edge of the row until the right arrow
appears, then click once. This allows for rapid formatting of horizontal data relationships.To select an entire table, position your cursor at the top-left corner of the table until the diagonal arrow
appears, then click once. This global selection enables comprehensive table-wide formatting changes.Master the Escape key for precise selection control: with your cursor in any table cell, press Escape once to select the entire cell container. Press Escape again to select all text content within that cell. This two-stage selection method gives you granular control over formatting targets.
Reorganize table data intuitively through drag-and-drop functionality. Select the row(s) or column(s) you want to relocate, then hover over the selection (avoiding borders) until the drag-and-drop cursor
appears. Drag your selection to the new position and release when the blue insertion line appears at your desired location. This visual feedback system ensures precise placement every time.
These table management techniques form the foundation of efficient document production. As data visualization becomes increasingly important in professional communication, mastering these fundamentals will enhance both your productivity and the clarity of your published materials.
Navigation and Selection Techniques
Cell Navigation
Move between cells efficiently using Tab and Shift-Tab keys, or use arrow keys for directional movement through your table structure.
Selection Methods
Master cursor positioning techniques to select columns, rows, or entire tables using visual arrow indicators that appear at borders.
Quick Selection
Use Escape key shortcuts to rapidly select table cells and their contents, streamlining your editing workflow significantly.
Table Selection Mastery
Click when arrow appears to select entire column
Click when arrow appears to select entire row
Click when arrow appears to select entire table
Press again to select all text within that cell
Hover away from borders and drag to blue line indicator
Reorder table data by selecting rows or columns, then dragging to the desired location. Look for the blue line indicator to confirm proper placement before releasing.