![]() Unlike the Caps Lock key, which applies to all keystrokes, font styles apply to the text for which the style is enabled, which remains after closing the document. Or select the text in All Caps and click the Clear Formatting command, which is top-right in the Font group on the Home tab (the image shows the characters “Aa” with something that might be an eraser). Selecting the text and pressing CTRL-SHFT-A again fixes it by turning All Caps off. I probably meant to hit CTRL-A (Select All), and if I accidentally hit CTRL-A before CTRL-SHFT-A, my entire document is suddenly UPPERCASE. Apparently when this happens, I’ve accidentally hit CTRL-SHFT-A (or maybe CTRL-ALT-A depending on the version of Word?). ![]() This finally annoyed me enough that I did some research and found. It might be a funny scene, movie quote, animation, meme or a mashup of multiple sources. Microsoft should disable the relevant keyboard shortcuts used by an impossible fraction of its userbase. You can take any video, trim the best part, combine with other videos, add soundtrack. This blog post has more than 120,000 views. In settings, search for toggle keys and configure Windows to play a sound when you press Caps lock. ![]() Ctrl+Alt+V,Down,Enter: Paste special ( unformatted, see also ).Ctrl+Shift+N: Clear paragraph formatting.Update 2.Apr.2021: Relevant Microsoft Office Word 365 keyboard shortcuts: Closing Word and opening the document again does not fix the problem. Other Windows applications and the light on the keyboard show that Caps Lock is actually off. ![]() Every once in a while, I find that Microsoft Word seems to think that Caps Lock is on, and everything I type appears in UPPERCASE. ![]()
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January 2023
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