How to Change the Office 2013 Ribbon Labels from All Caps to Title Case
Open the Microsoft Office 2013 program you'd like to fix the ribbon for., Right-click between two of the words in the ribbon bar at the top of the program and click "Customize the Ribbon". , Look on the page underneath the section "Customizing the...
Step-by-Step Guide
-
Step 1: Open the Microsoft Office 2013 program you'd like to fix the ribbon for.
There's no way to apply this fix to all programs at once, but you can do them individually, fairly quickly. -
Step 2: Right-click between two of the words in the ribbon bar at the top of the program and click "Customize the Ribbon".
, See how the tabs are shown? Microsoft tried to trick the system and made these labels appear to be all in caps. , Click on a top-level heading, not one that is designated as being part of the split-off of a bigger tab name. , This tricks the system into thinking that you've renamed the entry. ,, Just right-click the entry in the list, click Rename, and add that extra space to any other tabs you'd like to fix. ,, If one of these tabs still appears as being in all caps, go back and repeat the process, finding that tab entry in the list and renaming that tab. -
Step 3: Look on the page underneath the section "Customizing the Ribbon"
-
Step 4: just slightly below the "New Tabs" label.
-
Step 5: Right-click one of the entries in the box and click "Rename".
-
Step 6: Click into the Display name box and add one single space to the item.
-
Step 7: Click the OK button on the "Rename" box.
-
Step 8: Repeat the process for the other tabs.
-
Step 9: Click the "OK" button once all tabs have been renamed.
-
Step 10: Verify that your changes have taken place.
Detailed Guide
There's no way to apply this fix to all programs at once, but you can do them individually, fairly quickly.
, See how the tabs are shown? Microsoft tried to trick the system and made these labels appear to be all in caps. , Click on a top-level heading, not one that is designated as being part of the split-off of a bigger tab name. , This tricks the system into thinking that you've renamed the entry. ,, Just right-click the entry in the list, click Rename, and add that extra space to any other tabs you'd like to fix. ,, If one of these tabs still appears as being in all caps, go back and repeat the process, finding that tab entry in the list and renaming that tab.
About the Author
Gary Lewis
Enthusiastic about teaching creative arts techniques through clear, step-by-step guides.
Rate This Guide
How helpful was this guide? Click to rate: