No, formatting marks such as spaces, tabs, and line breaks do not typically print on a physical copy of a document. These marks are used by word processors to display and format text on screen, but they are not meant to be part of the printed output.
Formatting marks only appear in the print preview option when you enable them in your settings. They do not, however, print on paper.
True, you can hide formatting marks such as spaces, tabs, and paragraph marks in word processing software like Microsoft Word. These marks are typically used to denote formatting elements in a document and can be toggled on and off to show or hide them as needed.
for Microsoft Word 2007 Go to start button of Microsoft word click Word option menu which is display below the close option ->then select display -> uncheck the show all formatting marks option. you can solve your problem.
what do formatting marks look like fir you are going to formatting a tab
dotted line with the words Page Break in the middle of the line
For Microsoft Word 2007, 2010, and 2013, there is a one-time configuration change that should always be made: 1) Open Microsoft Word 2) At the upper left, click FILE 3) Near the bottom of the list on the left, click Options. This will open the Word Options window. 4) Near the top of the list on the left, click Display 5) Near the middle of the Word Options window is a check box labelled "Show all formatting marks". Click the check box so that a check mark appears. 6) At the bottom right of the Word Options window, click OK. From now on, Microsoft Word will display the formatting marks. They do not print. However, this is how Microsoft Word works. Seeing the formatting marks allows the user to know what is happening in the document.
There are lots of formatting features in Excel. You have the standard ones on fonts, like size, colour, bold, italics, underline etc. Then you have ones for values, such as formatting for numbers, currency, date, percentage, scientific etc. You have built in styles that you can use. You have Autoformat, for formatting whiole tables. You also have conditional formatting, where you can formatting things based on the value in the cells. For example you could display marks in red where it is a fail in an exam and green for marks that have passed. There is formatting for other things you can create, like formatting on charts. So there are many types of formatting that Excel has available.
There are lots of formatting features in Excel. You have the standard ones on fonts, like size, colour, bold, italics, underline etc. Then you have ones for values, such as formatting for numbers, currency, date, percentage, scientific etc. You have built in styles that you can use. You have Autoformat, for formatting whiole tables. You also have conditional formatting, where you can formatting things based on the value in the cells. For example you could display marks in red where it is a fail in an exam and green for marks that have passed. There is formatting for other things you can create, like formatting on charts. So there are many types of formatting that Excel has available.
Nonprintable characters
In word processing, print preview refers to formatting a document for the printer, but then displaying it on the display screen instead of printing it.
true