Paste Tables in iWork Summerville SC

Sometimes, you want to copy and paste tables as graphics--rather than live, editable tables--from Numbers into Pages. Here's how. There are times when you want to insert tables from Numbers into Pages documents as static graphics, rather than as live, editable tables. If you wanted to do something similar in Microsoft Office, you could copy tabular data from Excel, then use Office’s Paste Special command to paste the clipboard contents into Word as a picture. But there is no equivalent to Paste Special in iWork.

Staples
843-851-7717
1318 N. Main St
Summerville, SC
OfficeMax
843-569-3044
7400 Rivers Avenue
N. Charleston, SC
Digital Systems Support Inc.
(803) 400-2000
1233 Washington Street Ste 200
Columbia, SC
Computer Dynamics
(843) 770-0199
1750 Ribaut Road # B
Port Royal, SC
Staples
864-801-2690
1301 W. Wade Hampton Blvd.
Greer, SC
Staples
843-747-0267
4950 Centrepointe Dr
No. Charleston, SC
Staples
843-402-0955
78 Folly Road Space B 9
Charleston, SC
Corporate Express
(864) 271-0517
535 Brookshire Road
Greer, SC
Digital Systems Support
(803) 400-2013
1334 Sumter Street
Columbia, SC
Staples
843-842-3869
11 Palmetto Bay Rd.
Hilton Head, SC
Data Provided by:
 

Paste Tables in iWork

by Rob Griffiths , Macworld.com

There are times when you want to insert tables from Numbers into Pages documents as static graphics, rather than as live, editable tables. If you wanted to do something similar in Microsoft Office, you could copy tabular data from Excel, then use Office’s Paste Special command to paste the clipboard contents into Word as a picture. But there is no equivalent to Paste Special in iWork.

  • Recent Mac OS X Hints Posts
  • Paste tables as graphics in iWork
  • Customize Safari's RSS interface
  • Find parent folders in Finder search results
Mac OS X Hints home View all Macworld blogs

But there is a workaround: Copy the table in Numbers, then open Preview and press Command-N to paste the table as a new PDF. Next, copy the table (now a PDF) in Preview and paste it into Pages.

You could also use Shift-Control-Command-4 (which does a screen-grab of a region of the screen) to capture the table in Numbers, then paste it into Pages. While that works, there’s a noticeable difference in quality; using Preview as an intermediary yields a much better image, regardless of image format you use for the screen-grab.

This hint actually reveals something interesting about OS X’s Clipboard: It stores multiple versions of the data you’re copying. In this case, it copies the data in tabular form; you could paste the table from Numbers to Pages, and the data cells would be editable. But the Clipboard also copies that table as a graphic and as text; when you paste what you’ve copied, the application into which you’re pasting it will decide which of those forms it likes best.

Click here to read article at MacWorld