One of the advantages of using a word processing program is that you can edit a document or change the contents without re-creating it. In the WordPad work area, the mouse pointer changes to the I-beam pointer, which you can use to reposition the insertion point (called navigating) and insert, delete, or select text. Before you can edit text, you need to highlight, or select, the text you want to modify. Then you can delete, replace, move (cut), or copy text within one document or between documents even if they’re different programs. When you cut or copy an item, it’s placed on the Clipboard, which stores only a single piece of information at a time. You can also move or copy selected text without storing it on the Clipboard by using drag-and-drop editing.
Select and Edit Text
Move the I-beam pointer to the left or right of the text you want to select.
Drag the pointer to highlight the text.
Timesaver:
Double-click a word to select it; triple-click a paragraph to select it.
Point to the selected text, and then click and hold the mouse button.
If you want to copy the text to a new location, also press and hold the Ctrl key. A plus sign (+) appears in the pointer box, indicating that you are dragging a copy of the selected text.
Drag the selected text to the new location, and then release the mouse button (and the Ctrl key, if necessary).