Feb 9, 2017 - One of OneNote's best organization features is hiding in plain sight. Here's how to use the section groups feature to organize your books. Section Groups in OneNote – Tutorial: A picture of a user creating a Section Group in OneNote 2016. When you click on a Section Group in the Notebook Header, only the sections within that group will be displayed. You can easily go back to see all of your sections by clicking the “Navigate to parent section group,” which is the small green. ![]() Hi MikeH, AFAIK, OneNote seems has no 'grouping' function now. But I saw another one solved this similar issue by following method, so I quote his method here: 'I had a project where I wanted to have 8-10 'thought bubbles' that I wanted to physically manipulate. So naturally I crew the circles/ovals, then typed in/on them. If the text overran the circle, I either increased the size of the circle or decreased the text size. However, once these were done, you can imagine how bad it would SUCK to try to capture ONLY the items you wanted with the lasso and manipulate them. So instead, after I created each item, I took a snapshot with +, pasted the new one next to the old item, then erased the original 'bubble' made up of two items. What is a cracked version. Essentially, I often find myself assembling things how I like them using multiple containers and 'levels', then just taking a snapshot of the assembled beauty (monstrosity) and using it instead. Obviously this does not work if you need the text in the shape to be editable, but at that point, you could always just put a new container over the old text. I just think this method is particularly helpful when the primary goal is assembling and manipulating objects for the sake of organization. You can always do a final edit before you print, publish, or send!' Hope it will be helpful. Hi MikeH, AFAIK, OneNote seems has no 'grouping' function now. But I saw another one solved this similar issue by following method, so I quote his method here: 'I had a project where I wanted to have 8-10 'thought bubbles' that I wanted to physically manipulate. So naturally I crew the circles/ovals, then typed in/on them. If the text overran the circle, I either increased the size of the circle or decreased the text size. However, once these were done, you can imagine how bad it would SUCK to try to capture ONLY the items you wanted with the lasso and manipulate them. So instead, after I created each item, I took a snapshot with +, pasted the new one next to the old item, then erased the original 'bubble' made up of two items. Essentially, I often find myself assembling things how I like them using multiple containers and 'levels', then just taking a snapshot of the assembled beauty (monstrosity) and using it instead. Obviously this does not work if you need the text in the shape to be editable, but at that point, you could always just put a new container over the old text. I just think this method is particularly helpful when the primary goal is assembling and manipulating objects for the sake of organization. You can always do a final edit before you print, publish, or send!' Hope it will be helpful. ![]() I’ve got an appointment/meeting for which I need to complete some tasks before the actual event is taking place. It is important that I’ll be able to receive notifications whenever a Task is due as well as the final appointment. Is there an easy way to somehow link this appointment and all its tasks together so I can see which tasks need to be completed before that appointment but also to see which appointment belongs to a specific task? This is another situation where using OneNote’s integration with Outlook can offer a more streamlined solution than. Free online the da vinci code movie. When you have a saved appointment, you can link it to a page in a OneNote Notebook where you can add additional information. From this OneNote page, you can then directly create Tasks in Outlook. These tasks will have a reference to the OneNote item which hold a reference back to the appointment which also has a reference to the OneNote page. So everything is linked automatically. Even cooler; Marking a Task completed in Outlook, will also mark it as completed in OneNote and vice-versa. Using OneNote to create linked Appointment Tasks While the above explanation might sound a bit complicated, the entire process is actually very easy and quite natural to do. • Create your appointment in the Calendar. Save the appointment/meeting/all day event item before clicking on the OneNote icon or the OneNote item and the appointment/meeting/event item won’t be linked to each other (you can leave the item open, but you must save it).
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