ID: Q115271
6.00 6.00a WINDOWS kbusage
The information in this article applies to:
You type a word that begins with two uppercase letters, followed by a lowercase letter or letters, and press the SPACEBAR, and Word changes your typing to an initial capped word. For example, you intend to type "PCs" and Word changes your typing to "Pcs".
You have the AutoCorrect option "Correct TWo INitial CApitals" turned on.
Method 1: After Word changes ("corrects") your typing, choose Undo from the
Edit menu or click the Undo button on the Standard toolbar. Use
this method if the conflict is rare.
Method 2: Add the word you don't want AutoCorrect to correct to your
AutoCorrect entry list. Use this method if the conflict is
frequent. For example, if you don't want Word to correct "PCs" to
"Pcs", but you want to leave the "Correct TWo INitial CApitals"
option turned on, do the following:
a. From the Tools menu, choose AutoCorrect.
b. In the Replace box, type "Pcs" (without the quotation marks).
c. In the With box, type "PCs".
AutoCorrect first checks the replacement list (the Replace/With
entries). If the correction is in the replacement list, no
AutoCorrect rules (the check box options in the AutoCorrect
dialog box), such as "Correct TWo INitial CApitals," are
applied. This protocol guarantees that AutoCorrect doesn't
"correct" something you in fact wanted left as you typed it.
Method 3: Turn the AutoCorrect "Correct TWo INitial CApitals" option off by
choosing AutoCorrect from the Tools menu, and clearing the check
box.
"Microsoft Word User's Guide," version 6.0, pages 67-73
KBCategory: kbusage KBSubcategory: kbformat Additional reference words: 6.00 6.00a auto correct winword word6
Keywords : kbformat
Version : 6.00 6.00a
Platform : WINDOWS
Last Reviewed: February 6, 1998