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Keep track of changes in Pages

November 4, 2009 10:37 AM ET

Macworld - Whether you can't afford Microsoft Word ( Macworld rated 3.5 out of 5 mice , $180), don't like it, or just find yourself without it on one of your Macs, Apple's Pages ( Macworld rated 4 out of 5 mice ); part of the $79 iWork suite) offers some similar features. For instance, if you want to work with others on a document, Word's track changes feature isn't the only game in town. Pages can't merge or compare documents. It's limited to marking changes, as well as recording notes and highlights. But this might be all you need. Better yet, you can share marked up Pages documents with Word users and vice versa, so you're always ready to collaborate.

Get started

To activate change tracking in Pages, open a document and choose Edit -> Track Changes. You'll see a new toolbar appear. In Pages, this is a narrow strip below the main toolbar that contains the editing controls you can use.

Start making whatever changes you want. They'll display as they do in Word: deleted text appears as strikethrough text and added text appears in a different color. (If you're picky about how your changes appear, make very basic adjustments by selecting Pages -> Preferences and choosing from the options under the Deleted Text, Inserted Text, or Author pop-up menus.)

Need to add an editorial comment to a document? Insert comments by choosing Insert -> Comment and typing text. Your insertion point (whether it's a block of text or just the space between two words) becomes highlighted and a yellow line connects this highlighting to a bubble in the document's left margin. (Although the bubble looks more like a sticky note.) This distinct coloring makes comments easy to distinguish from other changes, which appear in blue by default.

Customize change display

Pages offers one customization option many Word users long for: you can choose--with some selectivity--whether or not to display tracking bubbles. When you're making changes, or editing changes, click on Tracking Bubbles in the change tracking toolbar. A menu appears where you can select from Show All (to display all tracking bubbles), Hide All (to hide them), or Show Only For Selection. This practical option makes it easier to follow your changes. You can, for example, select one paragraph at a time and view the bubbles that apply only to the selection.

Pages also lets you show and hide change bubbles easily, something that Word only does when you change views (or if you change a setting in the preferences). To hide change bubbles, click the << button at the left of the tracking toolbar, or choose View -> Hide Comments And Changes Pane.


Reprinted with permission from

For more Macintosh news, visit Macworld.com.
Story copyright 2009 Mac Publishing, LLC. All rights reserved.

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