WD: How to Transpose Rows and Columns in a Word Table
ID: Q143321
|
The information in this article applies to:
-
Microsoft Word for Windows, versions 6.0, 6.0a, 6.0c
-
Microsoft Word for the Macintosh, versions 6.0, 6.0.1
-
Microsoft Word for Windows NT, version 6.0
-
Microsoft Word for Windows 95, version 7.0
-
Microsoft Word 98 Macintosh Edition
SUMMARY
Word does not have the ability to transpose cells in a table; that is,
you cannot use Word to switch the orientation of columns to rows or vice
versa. This article describes how to use Microsoft Excel to provide this
functionality.
MORE INFORMATION
To transpose the rows and columns of your table, do the following:
- Open your Word document, select the table, and then click Copy on the
Edit menu.
- Start Excel.
- In Excel, click Paste Special on the Edit menu, click Paste,
select Text, and then click OK.
- Select the cells that contain the data that you want to transpose.
- On the Edit menu, click Copy.
- Select the upper-left cell of the paste area. Choose a blank area
of your Excel worksheet.
- On the Edit menu, click Paste Special.
- Select the Transpose check box, and then click OK.
This action switches the orientation of data when you paste it. For
example, data from the top row of the copied area appears in the
left column of the paste area; data from the left column appears in
the top row.
NOTE: If you get a Selection Not Valid error at this point, your
paste area contains data. Make sure you select a blank area on your
worksheet.
- Select the cells with the transposed data and click Copy on the Edit
menu.
- Switch to Word. Place your insertion point where you want to paste
the table.
- Click Paste Special on the Edit menu, choose Paste, select Formatted
Text (RTF), and then click OK.
Before you use the Transpose command, consider the following:
- Word tables are limited to 31 columns in Word 6.0 and 7.0, and to 63 in
Word 98. If your original table has more than 31 (or 63)
rows, and you transpose the rows with the columns, you will get the
following error message when you paste the table in your Word document:
There is not enough memory to complete the operation.
- If your original table contains tabs, Excel will convert each
tab to a new cell. Any text that follows the tab character will be moved
to the next adjacent cell. To avoid this problem, replace the tabs with
another character--such as the tilde (~)--that doesn't appear in your
document. After you transpose and paste the table back into your Word
document, replace the tilde character with a tab.
- If your Word table contains carriage returns, Excel will strip
the carriage returns and run your text together with the preceding text.
Use the method described in item 2, to replace the paragraph marks.
Additional query words:
transpose transposing transposes rotates pivots moves columns rows position
Keywords : kbdta wordnt macword98 winword ntword macword kbtable word7 word95
Version : MACINTOSH:6.0,6.0.1,98; WINDOWS:6.0,6.0a,6.0c,7.0; winnt:6.0
Platform : MACINTOSH WINDOWS winnt
Issue type : kbhowto
|