WD: Preventing Page Breaks in Tables

ID: Q193196

The information in this article applies to:

SUMMARY

Microsoft Word adds a page break if a table is too long to fit on the page. Part of the table may be on one page, while the rest of the table is forced to the next page. If the table is small enough to fit on a page, use the following method to force Word to keep the rows of the table together (use the steps appropriate for your version of Word).

Word for Windows, versions 6.0, 7.0

1. Select the table.

2. On the Format menu, click Paragraph.

3. Click the Text Flow tab.

4. Select the Keep with Next check box, and then click OK.

Word for Windows, version 2.0

1. Select the table.

2. On the Format menu, click Paragraph.

3. Select the Keep With Next check box under Pagination, and click OK.

Word for Windows, version 1.x

1. Select the table.

2. On the Format menu, click Paragraph.

3. Select the With Next check box under Keep Paragraph, and then click OK.

Word for the Macintosh, versions 6.0, 6.0.1, 6.0.1a

1. Select the table.

2. On the Format menu, click Paragraph.

3. Click the Text Flow tab.

4. Select the Keep With Next check box, and then click OK.

Word for the Macintosh, versions 5.1, 5.1a

1. Select the table.

2. On the Format menu, click Paragraph.

3. Select the Keep With Next check box under Pagination.

4. Click OK.

MORE INFORMATION

Word places a page break in a table if a single row or several rows are too long to fit between the top and bottom margins of the page. Also, any text on a page can cause the table to break between pages. To correct this problem, adjust the top and bottom margins so that the table fits on the page (or use the steps outlined in the "Summary" section of this article).

Additional query words:

Keywords          : kbdta wordnt winword macword word6 word7 word95 
Version           : MACINTOSH:5.1,5.1a,6.0,6.0.1,6.0.1a; WINDOWS:1.0,1.1,1.1a,2.0,2.0a,2.0a-CD,2.0b,2.0c,6.0,6.0a,6.0c,7.0,7.0a
Platform          : MACINTOSH WINDOWS
Issue type        : kbhowto

Last Reviewed: February 12, 1999