In Microsoft Word (2003) is it possible to change the size of all fonts relatively? In other words, make all text "x" pts or percent smaller or larger? For documents to be read on screen I like a larger base text size, smaller for print.

I know I can modify the styles of each type (normal paragraph, heading, list, etc.) but that quickly turns into a lot of work for any document of more than a few styles.

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There is in fact a "grow font" option command in Word 2003. To add it to your toolbar:

  1. Right-click on any of the toolbar buttons and select Customize
  2. Select the Commands tab
  3. Choose Format from the list under Categories
  4. Scroll down under Commands
  5. Drag Grow Font and Shrink font onto your taskbar where you want them to stick
  6. Click close

These buttons scale your fonts proportionally.

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Is this feature available in Word 2007 and 2010? – James Watt Aug 1 '10 at 5:17
@James Watt - Yes. These two buttons are located on the Home tab, right next to the drop down for font size, in both Word 2007 and 2010. – variant Aug 1 '10 at 12:19
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Are you trying to change the file permanently, or just have a larger font when you're reading the document? If it's the latter, you can just change the view percentage. In Word 2007 or 2010 you can do this using the percentage slider in the bottom right corner of the window.

If you're trying to change the size of all text permanently, just select all (Ctrl-A) and then use the Grow Font button on the toolbar, which looks like this: A^, or hit Ctrl->.

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It's usually for print, so permanently. There doesn't appear to be a Grow Font command in Word 2003. Nice to know that whenever our office finally gets around to upgrading the option will be available. Thanks. – matt wilkie Jul 23 '10 at 20:24
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