Let’s start applying Word Styles to our example text. You’ll also see dummy text that shows what each Style looks like.
In it you’ll find little windows with labels such as Title, Heading 1, Heading 2, Normal, etc. Here are the settings for the chapter heading example shown in this article: MS Word comes prepackaged with a Styles pane in the Home tab. You can tell that a text frame is in place when you click on any of the headings and see the frame drawn with tiny, blue, dashed lines, as shown below. When we read documents, especially long ones, we dont often read them start to finish, or word for word, we often skim them first to see whats in them. Now your headers will position themselves down the page as desired. Also set the desired Horizontal Position (for example to Center, as in the illustration shown in this article).
Many times when preparing a book or a long report, you will want a major heading (such as a chapter heading) to be positioned part of the way down the page, such as the following: