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Student & Parent Tutorials for ALL Google Apps
View this post on Instagram You can force others to make a copy of a Google document that includes comments from the original by replacing /edit with /copy?copyComments=true in its shareable link. This link works just like the regular Make a Copy link, and it also copies any comments from the original document into the copy. This can be handy if there are comments you want viewers to see and possibly reply to. Comments could include additional information, instructions, checklists, and hyperlinks. #googleedu #gsuiteedu #iteach #iteachtech #gaetc20 #iste20 #teachersofinstagram A post shared by Tony Vincent (@learninginhand) on Apr 27, 2020 at 2:29pm PDT
You can force others to make a copy of a Google document that includes comments from the original by replacing /edit with /copy?copyComments=true in its shareable link. This link works just like the regular Make a Copy link, and it also copies any comments from the original document into the copy. This can be handy if there are comments you want viewers to see and possibly reply to. Comments could include additional information, instructions, checklists, and hyperlinks. #googleedu #gsuiteedu #iteach #iteachtech #gaetc20 #iste20 #teachersofinstagram
A post shared by Tony Vincent (@learninginhand) on Apr 27, 2020 at 2:29pm PDT
View this post on Instagram When you add a comment to a Google Docs, Slides, Sheets, or Drawings document, you don’t see any text formatting tools. Usually if someone wants to draw attention to words in a comment, they use ALL CAPITAL LETTERS. All caps is a way to add emphasis, but it also looks like the message is being shouted. Google does provide a way to bold, underline, and strikethrough text in a G Suite document. Type an asterisk before and after the word or phrase you want to make bold. Type an underscore before and after the text you want to italicize. Type a hyphen before and after anything you’d like to strike through. A post shared by Tony Vincent (@learninginhand) on Nov 17, 2019 at 8:12am PST
When you add a comment to a Google Docs, Slides, Sheets, or Drawings document, you don’t see any text formatting tools. Usually if someone wants to draw attention to words in a comment, they use ALL CAPITAL LETTERS. All caps is a way to add emphasis, but it also looks like the message is being shouted. Google does provide a way to bold, underline, and strikethrough text in a G Suite document. Type an asterisk before and after the word or phrase you want to make bold. Type an underscore before and after the text you want to italicize. Type a hyphen before and after anything you’d like to strike through.
A post shared by Tony Vincent (@learninginhand) on Nov 17, 2019 at 8:12am PST