Older versions of Adobe Reader (5.0 and 6.0), allowed you to select the Text tool, click-and-drag the vertical line cursor to select the text, hit Ctl-C to copy it to the clipboard, and then simply paste it into a Word document; however, using Acrobat 8.0, this same copy-and-paste seems to be difficult if not impossible. Aug 29, 2013 Paste text into paragraph without changing format In past Word versions, I have always pasted with 'Paste Special-Unformatted Text' option. However, in Word 2010, pasting with the 'Keep Text Only' option changes the formatting of the paragraph into which you are pasting to Normal, abandoning the current formatting of the paragraph.
![Past Past](/uploads/1/2/5/5/125520924/323237279.png)
![Format Format](/uploads/1/2/5/5/125520924/108813770.jpg)
In this Clipboard section there are 4 elements:. ‘Paste’ which is symbolized by the clipboard and sheet.
‘Cut’ which is symbolized by the scissors. ‘Copy’ which is symbolized by the two sheets.
‘Format Painter’ which is symbolized by the paintbrushThis section of the Home tab is on the far left side of the ribbon just before the Font section.If we click on the small arrow at the lower left corner of the Clipboard section, it expands to show the most recently copied elements still on the clipboard. Here we can see the same options in addition to several others.But let’s get back to the task of pasting our formula.When we select our destination cell (‘D10’), we simply select ‘Formulas’ for our paste method and the cell now contains the formula we copied from our source cell with the cell references in the formula adapted to the new row.Awesome, right?But what if we had several rows of new data we added in the values column and we wanted to add formulas to the ‘Formula’ column for all those new rows of data?