When you are satisfied with the list of commands, click OK.
What controls the size and location of those I cant figure out how to change that. I want to make them big, like some of the others, and be side by side. They are added in tiny icons, one above the other.
If you want to remove any commands from the Quick Access Toolbar, select the command at the right side of the dialog box and click Remove. Ive customized the 'Home' toolbar in the ribbon of Microsoft Word 2016 for Mac (OS X El Cpaitan), to add a few items.
they are also used in toolbars that have so few buttons that each button can have a text label. these buttons are used for frequently used toolbar buttons whose icon isnt sufficiently self-explanatory. Labeled icon buttons a command button or property button labeled with an icon and a text label.
A toolbar is just a collection of icons that provides a shortcut to using the drop-down menu. In the list of commands at the left side of the dialog box, select the one you want to appear on the Quick Access Toolbar. A menu (or drop-down menu) is the way in which actions can be performed.Using the Choose Commands From drop-down list, specify what group of commands you want listed in the dialog box.The Quick Access Toolbar area of the Word Options dialog box. At the left side of the dialog box, click Customize (Word 2007) or Quick Access Toolbar (Word 2010 and Word 2013).In Word 2010 and Word 2013, display the File tab of the ribbon and then click Options.) (In Word 2007 click the Office button and then click Word Options. Here’s a few imageMSO names to get you started. Hover over an icon to see the imageMso name. Spreadsheet1 has many, but not all, the images. To customize this toolbar, follow these steps: The Microsoft list is useless because it’s just a list of names without images go figure. You can, however, change the tools that appear on the Quick Access Toolbar. The Quick Access Toolbar includes, by default, three tools that allow you to save your document, undo an action, and redo an action. The Quick Access Toolbar is the area just above the ribbon, at the top-left portion of the screen. The customization area that is common to both versions of Word, however, is what is called the Quick Access Toolbar. Word 2007 does not allow you to easily modify the tools that appear on the ribbon tabs, but Word 2010 "opened up" Word a bit so you could modify those tools and Word 2013 continued the trend. Word allows you, within limits, to customize the tools that are available in the user interface.