If in MS Word the picture is set to “in the text”, then all its position settings are turned off. There was a need to shift such figures in height, i.e. change vertical bottom alignment to center alignment. Is there any way to do this?

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    Hands Well, this question does not apply to programming, it refers to the fact that someone is at odds with MS Office software. That’s all. - Artem
  • Still, how? In which file which parameter to change? I completely agree that the question is not about programming - this is a question about software configuration. In normal operation mode, this setting is not regulated, some non-standard "manual" actions are needed. Who else is it to learn, except from programmers? - Andrey Yuryevich
  • Well, yes, the "Position" button, then the "In the text" binding - and everything, all the settings are gray. Other bindings are “Contour”, “Around Frame”, etc. in this case, they are not needed - the image is bound to a specific character of the string. - Andrey Yuryevich
  • Bind the image to a specific character string? Cool took)) I think that even time should not be wasted searching for such a built-in function. - Deonis
  • When we insert a picture with a binding "in the text" this is exactly what happens. True, most likely you need to talk about binding not to the symbol, but to the word, but this does not change the essence, the word can also be from one symbol. The main thing is that during formatting such a sequence “word1” - “pattern” - “word2” is preserved. And no additional built-in function is needed here. - Andrey Yuryevich

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Greetings. Solution for Word 2003. To align, and in the proposed method it will be more accurate to "fit" the image tied to the text in height, select the drawing; select the menu Format> Font ...; On the Interval tab, select Offset> Down> For example, by 4 pt. Successes!

  • Thank you very much! Indeed, exit, now write a macro. - Andrey Yuryevich

Who else is it to learn, except from programmers?

I now, for example, know MS Word for 50 percent, but this does not bother me to program. But it took me one minute to find the “Position” button and select the vertical centering

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  • Is it 2007 or 2010? I just have 2003, it's not there. - Andrey Yuryevich
  • MS Office 2007 - Deonis
  • Thank you, put 2007. - Andrei Yurevich