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Microsoft IT Technology

Microsoft is Finally Changing Word's Annoying Default Paste Behavior (pcworld.com) 80

An anonymous reader shares a report: The default pasting behavior of Microsoft Word is a nightmare, and has been forever. If you want to add a text or image using the standard option, you can easily mess up the entire formatting in the text if a completely different font suddenly appears. After many years of complaints, Microsoft is finally listening to user feedback and changing the default behavior when pasting in Word.

From now on, the source's formatting will no longer be automatically retained. Instead, "Merge formatting" will be the new default for everyone, as Microsoft explained in a blog post this week. This means that after the update, newly pasted text will take on the font size, font type, and color of the text written in Word. However, special features such as lists or italicized elements will be retained. If you want these elements to be automatically adapted to the Word text, you must select the option "Keep text only."

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Microsoft is Finally Changing Word's Annoying Default Paste Behavior

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  • Mac (Score:5, Informative)

    by CAIMLAS ( 41445 ) on Monday May 13, 2024 @01:24PM (#64469273)

    On Mac, even when explicitly attempting to paste without formatting, Word somehow overrides this functionality and pastes with formatting. It's infuriating.

    • Copy something; In Word: Edit Menu->Paste Special->Select Unformatted Text, works 100% and matches the formatting your cursor is on. Also 100% annoying you have to go through that many steps. This should be the default behavior.
  • by forrie ( 695122 ) on Monday May 13, 2024 @01:26PM (#64469283)

    I've found their default copy-and-paste behavior to be utterly perplexing and annoying. When copy-and-paste something into a document, I rarely want (or need) original formatting, just the text. I feel like that should be the default action, anything else should be optionally selected.

    • by laxguy ( 1179231 )

      perplexing and annoying

      no, its way worse than that, its a *NIGHTMARE* (the horrors)

    • by Zarhan ( 415465 ) on Monday May 13, 2024 @01:45PM (#64469321)

      I just paste whatever into notepad, then select all and copy there. THEN I can paste into Word without screwups.

      • by Petersko ( 564140 ) on Monday May 13, 2024 @02:16PM (#64469399)

        Or install the free PureText app. Strips the clipboard in situ.

        • Or hold the Alt key down as you press Ctrl+V. But sure a whole separate program with hooks into the OS clipboard works too.

          • You solve a tiny little slice of the problem. PureText solves it for every clipboard function.

      • Usually, when pasting from other sources, I *do* want some formatting, such as bold/italic and superscript. Plain text paste doesn't do that.

      • I just paste whatever into notepad, then select all and copy there. THEN I can paste into Word without screwups.

        There's literally a button in Word to post text only. There's even a keyboard shortcut ALT+CTRL+V which does what you want.

        It never ceases to amaze me how people make things difficult for themselves simply by not spending 30 seconds to Google if there's a solution to their problem. How many cumulative hours of your life have you wasted jumping into Notepad unnecessarily?

        • by Zarhan ( 415465 )

          Nope, it does not. It gives me a "Paste Special" dialog, where options are typically "Unformatted text", "HTML format" or "Unformatted unicode text". Which by default is set to "HTML", so I have to move that selection around.

          So...no, you are wrong, there is no button to directly post "text only". In MS Teams they *do* have shift+ctrl+v, but it doesn't work on Word.

    • My standard practice is to copy to the clipboard, paste into Notepad, copy from Notepad, paste into receivig document.

      All formattig gone :)

      • by upuv ( 1201447 )

        Yeah this has been my standard practice as well.

        Needing strip out all of the style information that gets pasted as well.

        Nothing like pasting some text and then realising that your now have multiple style of paragraphs, bullets, and worse numbering. And with no means of actually stripping out these now useless styles from the document they will haunt you forever. Slowly infecting your entire library of documents over time. You end up being the style police with you co-workers. Clean style documents mak

      • by chefren ( 17219 )
        Except from Excel where you still get spaces added to the end..
    • by glitch! ( 57276 )

      Yes, as others have noted, it must be cut and pasted to some separate app to remove the formatting.

      I had the worst time with Libreoffice when it would convert my USPS tracking numbers into... something else. At some point, they finally allowed me to enter a number as a text field. Now I can enter my tracking numbers without them being mutilated.

      Going back to the subject, when I want to copy and paste some text, I expect and want ASCII text! I DO NOT WANT some crappy formatting in my reply. If only I could h

  • Too late (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Brett Buck ( 811747 ) on Monday May 13, 2024 @01:27PM (#64469285)

    It would have been great if they had done this 20+ years ago. Now all this will do is break everyone's long-established workarounds.

    • by Ecuador ( 740021 )

      OK, now you are just complaining in order to complain. Let them have this one! Yes, it should have been fixed a long time ago, but many other text editors behave exactly the same, so it was not obvious that they'd fix it.

      • Point taken. I note that this is a "damned if you do, damned if you don't" situation, anything they do will piss someone off.

    • Now all this will do is break everyone's long-established workarounds.

      Workarounds are for people who don't learn to use software. There was a function (including keyboard shortcut) that did this already. Alt+Ctrl+V. And that "workaround" still works after the default behavioral change.

      We should never design software to suit the lowest common denominator of a user who never bothered to understand how the software worked in the first place. If your workaround got broken, sorry but screw you, don't stand in the way of progress. God knows this is the first time Microsoft may have

      • We should never design software to suit the lowest common denominator of a user who never bothered to understand how the software worked in the first place.

        Microsoft has consistently tried to present a user interface model where the user doesn't have to understand how the software works. The idea is that if you need someone to explain it to you, the UI engineer has failed. As much as we like to pillory Microsoft for bad design decisions, UI is one of the few aspects of their design that they've actua

    • Libreoffice.
      It won't brake that workaround :)

  • I think it really depends on the source of the copied text. If I'm copying from a web page, I don't want to maintain any of the formatting from the original webpage. But if I'm copying from one part of a document to another part of the document, then it should probably keep the formatting it had when I originally copied it.

    • I definitely think their merge formatting is a better choice. If copying something with bold or italic among the words I would want that to carry.

  • Thankfully, I was using Word when they had just transitioned from drop-down menus to the ribbon. At that time, Word would tooltip you about keyboard shortcuts, to help ease the transition. From that I learned the sequence Alt-E, S for "paste special".
  • by BigFire ( 13822 ) on Monday May 13, 2024 @01:48PM (#64469331)

    to paste and recapture the actual text instead of directly pasting. It's annoying.

    • Unfortunately, that option doesn't preserve bold/italics or superscripts. For this reason, I changed the Word default paste option years ago.

    • Why would you do that when there's a keyboard shortcut to paste in Word that does this without the extra clicking, extra key presses, and running of another program? Alt+ctl+v

  • Never, in my decades of using spreadsheets, have I ever wanted HTML formatting to follow what I copy and paste across cells. I don't even care that it's the default behaviour! For the love of $deity just put a $FSCKing keyboard shortcut for plain text paste in Excel. You'll save folks CENTURIES in time vs. all the clicks to do it with the stupid icons on the stupid right-click menu. Folks have written VS Scripts that break every few versions of Excel just to do this. Why is this so hard? OO.org had this two decades ago! While you're at it, make this the default for all MS applications!

    • That's wild.

      I know some secretaries who switched to ooo when Microsoft did The Ribbon and never looked back.

      It hadn't occurred to me this might still be a Word misfeature.

      I thought Word 5.1 for Mac was close to ideal tho.

      • Word for Windows 2.0 baby. Did 99% of what I needed in a word processor, and did it thirty years ago.

        From double-click to ready for typing in about 1 second on a 486DX2-66.

      • by celest ( 100606 )

        I thought Word 5.1 for Mac was close to ideal tho.

        Blashphemy! In those days it was ClarisWorks or broke! ;)

      • by hawk ( 1151 )

        word 5.1 and excel 4, Mac, were the last products out of Redmond that I saw any reason to buy (and I did).

        At the time, Word on the Mac and Word for dos had *nothing* in common other than the name.

        Well, they could *kind of* read one another's files--but you lost things like inserted charts in the process!

        The Mac Word was the best available at the time (unless you needed certain things like WP), while the DOS/Windows version was a distance third, propped up only by the lack of a viable fourth.

        Word 6, though,

    • And while they're at that, can they get rid of the flamingly stupid "feature" where Excel "helpfully" automagically changes text that is in hh:mm:ss format (hours, minutes, seconds) to a date? Not the layout of the data, but actually CHANGES it, even in a CSV! With no way to disable it!

      I have an export of time elapsed for a report that I do, and I was forced to install LibreOffice at work to actually get what I need (I use it at home). So many years ago I wanted to switch us to OpenOffice, but noooo...

      • Yep, Excel copy/paste is stupid. As for CSV, Excel uses the formatted values. The original datetime values is there, it just doesn't export it to CSV that way.

        You might try formatting the spreadsheet, or the column, as TEXT first, then paste. Sometimes that helps preserve the value as you would want it to.

  • It wasn't long ago they added CTRL + V to past unformatted in Word, which I immediately started using all the time. Pasting things and blowing out formatting is sort of a tradition for word. This new option sounds like a smart move.
  • I know goddamn google in goddamn chrome doesn't have it either, but...

  • And now they announce Word's paste behavior is getting fixed? Wow, I didn't realize it was all Melinda's doing!

  • by echo123 ( 1266692 ) on Monday May 13, 2024 @02:47PM (#64469475)

    Ultra smug LibreOffice user on Ubuntu here and I have no clue what ya'll are talking about, but it sounds miserable. Why do you live like that, (aside from your paycheck of course)?

    • LibreOffice: When the UI MUST be 1998.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        LibreOffice: When the UI gives you a *choice* of "1998" or ribbon-style, or several variations of both. Choice? What madness is this?

        There are actually seven options for the user interface, available via "view"->"user interface".

        And yeah, I guess this isn't very well-known, with the "traditional" version being the default.

  • Will this fix the issue with bullet points and tabs being copied even though they weren't selected? That annoys me to no end!
  • by Vandil X ( 636030 ) on Monday May 13, 2024 @03:41PM (#64469581)
    I've been pasting into Notepad (and TextEdit on Mac) to remove all encoding, and then copying and pasting from that to a target app. It would be good to not have to do this.
  • by unfortunateson ( 527551 ) on Monday May 13, 2024 @03:50PM (#64469603) Journal

    There are still a lot of ways pasted text could crap all over your document, mainly having to do with styles. Note in the linked article this only affects text pasted in from other applications -- that sounds like if it comes from Word, you're still subject to the old rules.
    If the text you're pasting in has the SAME styles as your document, you're golden: Heading 1 in the old doc should get formatted like heading 1 where you paste it. That's good.

    But if you're using a custom template that uses "PDQ Heading 1" and "PDQ Body" and what you're pasting from uses "WWF Heading 1" and "WWF Body", you're going to have those styles contaminating your document. If the text you're copying has corrupt style names, e.g. ",,Chapter,Heading 1" -- which admittedly doesn't happen as much as it used to -- that pink slime ends up in your document and is very hard to clean out.

    I've written "Paste Safely" code (a couple times, each redeveloped from scratch) that looks at a list of known styles and how to translate them, pastes into a "quarantine" doc, translates styles, then copies pastes into your doc.

  • I would like raw copy-paste to be implemented as the default in all software. It's about the context. If I'm copying something from A to B, I would nearly always expect the content to be adjusted to the target context, and not the other way around. This gets even more obvious if you consider multiple sources. Imagine you have sources A, B, C and D all with different formatting style. If you copied a bit of information from every one of these sources to a target document E, you'd end up with a Frankenstein o

  • by david.emery ( 127135 ) on Monday May 13, 2024 @05:22PM (#64469807)

    I was able to pick up a document constructed by a bunch of people using cut-and-paste and establish it was not produced through a coherent intellectual process. Part of the evidence was how various parts of the document had different formatting, sometimes on the same page, showing the mechanics how the document was produced, as well as the semantics that Part A of the document in one format did not fit with Part B in another format.

    One of my favorites (in a document formally delivered for which payment was expected) said to paraphrase. "The name of software component shall prevent kinetic damage to the computer system." (The actual text was a paragraph or two, but that was what it basically said. This was in a section of material that had no relevance to a software-only product, cut from a different hardware-oriented system specification. There was a bunch of other hardware-related stuff, like electrical connections.) In my review, I challenged the contractor who wrote that. "How does the software do this? Does it enable the force field around the hardware? Or did you cut-and-paste that from a different document from a previous hardware project?" One engineer admitted privately it was the latter, but on the record the company said "Thank you for your comments. We will be revising and resubmitting this deliverable." (This was provided by a company that has been in the news lately for crashing/missing/falling parts, etc. on their primary product line. ) In another instance, the same document said "The name of software component shall recycle bytes, and shall make use of recycled bytes, to the maximum extent feasible." That was in a draft document provided to me for review. The guy who wrote that told me, "I inserted that to see if you, or anyone else, actually read this document." So he removed that from the delivered document, and we got a good laugh out of it. (This happened 20 years ago, but from what I've seen, it's still a problem in my former industry.)

    So companies that construct contract deliverables through a bunch of monkeys "reusing text" from other documents will be thrilled by this new "feature." For those of us who conduct document forensics on such deliverables, this is a sad day.

  • The World is getting a better place after all.

  • That is far less annoying than Excels temporary clipboard.

    I hate how if you copy something, then edit another cell, the clipboard ends. If you don't paste immediately you need to start all over.

    That has been one of the more annoying Office bugs.

    Outside of the fact that OneNote doesn't follow any of the editing functionality of Word, given the fact that OneNote is basically just word with tabs and pages

    • Yep, other than collaborative editing Iâ(TM)ve not seen much innovation in MS Office in the 30+ years Iâ(TM)ve been using it. It feels like abandon-ware. And this ridiculous copy paste in Excel behaviour is annoying in a daily basis.
  • Does Word not support ctrl+shift+f to paste without formatting? I thought this was standard. Attempting to keep the original formatting is something that most rich text tools support, and holding shift when pasting removes it.

    I didn't even know that this was a problem that existed.

  • by ledow ( 319597 )

    Can they now fix that you can't Ctrl-Shift-V into Outlook at all? But yet there's a menu item right there to paste without formatting.

  • We have a business process that relies on the previous behavior. How do we revert?
  • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Tuesday May 14, 2024 @07:37AM (#64470857) Homepage Journal

    Microsoft recently changed Word's behavior so that when you open a document to which you do not have write access, it pops up a little message in a word bubble (like in a comic book) that says you can't edit it, and you have to acknowledge it before you can do anything else. This change occurred within the last year.

    My employer retains knowledge in Word documents. When I open one of these documents I used to just hit ^F and search to find the part in the document that I wanted. Now I have to acknowledge the notice before I can do that.

    Nobody wanted this "feature". Just put the bar across the top of the document like you do in Excel, Office developer assholes.

  • Great! And while you're at it could you remove that idiot assistant that keeps popping up "helpful suggestions" and stealing focus -- while I'm typing?

    Oh, and the equation editor in Word. And tables in Word. And the 47,000 other stupid things in Office that keep us from getting our work done.

    If you work hard, and occasionally think about the user, maybe someday you can be as efficient and useful as LibreOffice.

  • by groobly ( 6155920 ) on Tuesday May 14, 2024 @11:19AM (#64471375)

    It only took them 40 years to do what was obvious to anyone with a brain.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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