
Tips.Net > WordTips Home > Tables > Hiding Table Gridlines, by Default
Summary: Gridlines allow you to see the boundaries of a table, even if you have table borders turned off. Word allows you to specify whether you want the gridlines turned on or off, by default. This tip explains how that works, in addition to how gridlines relate to borders. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, and Word 2003.)
Ben said that he was having a problem with gridlines. He wanted them to be turned off (invisible) by default, but could not get that to occur. Gridlines in tables are controlled by the Hide/Show Gridlines toggle on the Tables menu. If the option in the menu is Hide Gridlines, then that means gridlines are visible; they are turned on. If the option is Show Gridlines, then that means gridlines are invisible; they are turned off.
In doing some testing, we found that the setting of the gridlines option is persistent from one session of Word to another. In other words, if you click Table | Hide Gridlines, then that setting remains for future sessions with Word, unless you have a macro that resets the option. If you are sure that the gridlines option is, indeed, being reset, then this is the first thing to check.
One thing to check is whether you are possibly confusing gridlines with borders. When you insert a table into a document, Word adds borders to that table by default. Only if you remove the borders can you see the underlying gridlines, provided you didn't click Table | Hide Gridlines. Borders print, but gridlines do not print; they are only visible for reference purposes.
To turn off borders by default, follow these steps:
Tip #293 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 2000 2002 2003
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