It happens all the time. You are working on a document, and you make a change. Then you realize, thats not what you wanted to do at all!
Fortunately, KWord has a solution for you.
Each time you make a change to a document, KWord remembers what the change was. If you decide to remove some of the changes, you can “Undo” each change one at a a time.
As an example, William Shakespeare is using KWord to write his new drama. He types in the following verse:
| Chorus: | Two households, both alike in dignity, |
| In fair Verona, where we lay our scene, | |
| From ancient grudge break to new mutiny, | |
| Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean. |
Now he thinks to himself, “Maybe Verona is not the ideal place?”
So he changes the line:
| Chorus: | Two households, both alike in dignity, |
| In fair Constantinople, where we lay our scene, | |
| From ancient grudge break to new mutiny, | |
| Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean. |
“No”, he says to himself, “that screws up the meter of the poem”, and decides to change it back.
He selects Edit->Undo from the menubar.
The text now reads “Verona” again.
If, after you Undo a change, and then decide that was a mistake, you can select Edit->Redo and the Undo is reversed.