Working with Notebooks, Sections, and Pages in Microsoft OneNote Home and Student 2013

  • 5/15/2013
In this chapter from Microsoft Office Home and Student 2013 Step by Step, learn how to work with notebooks, sections, and pages in Microsoft OneNote Home and Student 2013.

Chapter at a glance

Organize notebooks and sections, page 671

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Organize

Insert images and ink, page 676

Recover deleted sections or pages, page 684

IN THIS CHAPTER, YOU WILL LEARN HOW TO

  • Create and organize notebooks.

  • Create, organize, and manage sections and section groups.

  • Create and organize pages and subpages.

  • Add and organize notes.

  • Insert images and work with ink and shapes.

  • Recover deleted sections or pages.

Microsoft OneNote is built around the metaphor of a spiral-bound notebook—though of course you can have multiple notebooks in OneNote if you like. Each notebook is divided into sections, and each section contains the pages where your notes are located.

Before you can get started capturing ideas and research with OneNote, you need to get your notebooks, sections, and pages set up. Adding notebooks is easy. You need to decide where you want to store them and what you want to call them, but after that, you’re ready to go. You can have as many notebooks as you have storage space for. Notebooks must have at least one section, but they don’t have to have more than one. Likewise, each section has to have at least one page, but can have only one. It’s not likely you’ll want to have a notebook that has only a single section and single page in it, but you can.

Creating a notebook

Creating a notebook is quite simple to do. Simply click the File tab to go to the Backstage view and then choose New. The New Notebook page appears, and it’s time to make your first important choice—where to put your new notebook.

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OneNote shows you the list of places it recognizes and gives you the option to add a place that it doesn’t. It’s worth noting that the Add A Place option only offers choices of places in the cloud. You won’t get local or network locations there. The default location in OneNote 2013, as in many programs of the Microsoft Office Home and Student 2013 suite, is on your Microsoft SkyDrive. On the list shown just previously, you may notice from the icon that the first place listed is a Microsoft SharePoint site.

When you are choosing a location to store your new notebook, there are a few things you should know:

  • If you plan to share this notebook with mobile devices, only the Windows Phone version of OneNote mobile can access notebooks stored on SharePoint. If you’re an iPhone, iPad, or Android user, you’ll need to store the notebook on SkyDrive.

  • If you plan to share this notebook with other PCs, you can select any network location those PCs also have access to. A network file share, network storage device, SharePoint, or SkyDrive will all work fine as long as all of the PCs involved can access that location.

  • After you’ve selected your location, give your notebook a name. Choose a name that makes sense to you, but try not to make it too long. Marketing and Clients are great names. Collection of notes about my trips throughout North Carolina, California, Canada, and much of Southern Mississippi is a poor name.

  • With your location chosen and notebook named, click Create Notebook. Your new notebook is created and opened in OneNote with a single section and a single page within that section.