Finally, you decide to simply delete the text box. You then type some text in the regular document, outside the text box. You delete some text in the middle of the text box, then you type some more text in the box. Let's say that you have a text box that includes some text. It is much easier to simply "roll back" the document state to when a particular edit was made than it is to pick and choose which edits to undo. Why is this? Quite simply it is because being selective in undoing actions can cause instability in your document. You cannot select a single item from the undo list without also undoing everything since that point. It would be great, but you can't do it in Word. Wouldn't it be great if you could be selective about the "undos" that you want to choose? Wouldn't it be great if you could choose to undo just the delete action and leave everything else alone? If you choose that delete action, then all the changes since that time are also undone. You take a look at the undo list in Word (by clicking on the down arrow next to the Undo tool above the ribbon), and you see that the delete action you want to undo is buried down five or six layers in the Undo list. You then type a bit more, make a few more changes, and then realize that you should not have deleted the object. It's happened to all of us-you are editing your document, and you delete an object.
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