Printing a Microsoft Word document in outline format
up vote
14
down vote
favorite
I'm currently typing up notes in Microsoft Word using the outline mode, but when I try to print this document it loses the outlining format and reverts to the original document:

microsoft-word printing
add a comment |
up vote
14
down vote
favorite
I'm currently typing up notes in Microsoft Word using the outline mode, but when I try to print this document it loses the outlining format and reverts to the original document:

microsoft-word printing
add a comment |
up vote
14
down vote
favorite
up vote
14
down vote
favorite
I'm currently typing up notes in Microsoft Word using the outline mode, but when I try to print this document it loses the outlining format and reverts to the original document:

microsoft-word printing
I'm currently typing up notes in Microsoft Word using the outline mode, but when I try to print this document it loses the outlining format and reverts to the original document:

microsoft-word printing
microsoft-word printing
edited Oct 21 '11 at 15:26
Jonas Heidelberg
1,26711534
1,26711534
asked Nov 9 '09 at 3:34
user17342
add a comment |
add a comment |
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
up vote
17
down vote
The generel procedure to print the outline (with headers indented etc.) is to switch to outline view and then select the print function.
However, at least in Word 2010 this might be a bit confusing. When you access the print function you are switching away from outline view and you are also presented with a print preview on the right side of the window. This preview will display the document as if it was printed normally not using the outline. However, when actually printing you still get the outline.
If you want to only print the outline down to a level of your choice you simply have to customize the outline view by hiding lower level items before printing it.
1
I just checked and Martin is right - this also works - and yes it IS confusing.
– yosh m
Jul 5 '11 at 20:19
3
Thanks, Martin! How naive of me to assume that the print preview actually previewed what was going to be printed, so I gave up that path and kept looking until your answer here revealed I should close my eyes, tap my heels together and believe my outline will emerge, so +1 from me! See my related question for another facet of outlining I am trying to figure out.
– Michael Sorens
Sep 9 '11 at 0:17
To clarify, while viewing your document in the Outline view use the normal print function; it will print in Outline view, despite what the Print Preview says. (Confirmed in Word 2016)
– Nick May
May 10 '16 at 13:08
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
This was driving me crazy, too. Finally I found the way to do it. Instead of using the regular Print command (which switches to regular Print Layout view & shows you a print preview), you need to use the Quick Print command.
Here are a couple ways to access it:
- On the Quick Access Toolbar (usually it is above the Tabs in the window's title bar on the left side), press on the down-arrow to customize it. You'll see one of the commands you can choose is Quick Print. Select it to add it to the Quick Access Toolbar.
- Use the Search Commands tab (a tool available from the Office Labs site at http://www.officelabs.com/projects/searchcommands/ ) and search for Print or Quick Print - it'll show up in the results.
Now - how do you use it? First, set your Default Printer to the printer you want to use. Second, put your document in Outline view and arrange what you want to have shown (i.e., how many levels, etc.). Then press the Quick Print button and presto - it prints out what is on the screen, without switching to the Print Layout, i.e., in the Outline view.
1
People who use Quick Print should know that it sends your document to the printer immediately without asking for any confirmation. If you want to choose the number of pages to print, etc., you're out of luck.
– Alan
Jun 29 '16 at 19:31
You, sir or madam, are a life saver!
– BeNice
Jul 28 '17 at 11:59
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
You could put in a table of contents, tied to the headings you have used, then just print the pages which have the TOC on them
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
Outlining format by design will not print exactly what is shown in outline mode. If you want your document to look like what's on the screen when you print it, design it in print layout view (View tab -> Document Views -> Print Layout).
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I use a template with the same outline structure but the outline levels I do not want to appear are formatted as "hidden." Then when the outline in the document to be printed changes I copy the entire document (Select All—Copy.) In my print template I replace the out dated text with the copied version using Paste Special "Formatted Text RTF" option.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
The best way to print an outline is to apply a different style outline to the document, I believe. In Word 2013: Select All, Multilevel List (Dropdown Menu, under HOME), [select any list with HEADING 1-------, HEADING 2------- following it].
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Ta for the suggestions. I also wanted to copy only a particular level. Don't know much about styles, so instead tried highlighting the desired level(s) in outline view, then printing, yes, but to One Note as the 'printer'. Need to have the One Note 2013 application in the Office suite to do this, and need to specify ONE Note as the 'printer'.
You can then copy from One Note back into a word file. Handy for flipping chapters or headings about, without worrying about the contents. If you copy the headings in outline view straight across to another Word file, it also drags all the 'descendent' levels with it, which is NOT what is required. Word in effect 'filters' out the undesired levels when it sends them to the 'printer' which is a handy feature.
On another Outline-related matter, I would love to know about an outliner in which you could specify ONE LEVEL ONLY (not all the levels down to say, level 3) to print out. A really good outliner would do this.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Microsoft XPS Writer is the only way I found to print the outline view exactly as it is. It looks like a PDF document but keeps all the formatting without defaulting to the main document. Microsoft XPS Writer is an optional printer.
add a comment |
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
17
down vote
The generel procedure to print the outline (with headers indented etc.) is to switch to outline view and then select the print function.
However, at least in Word 2010 this might be a bit confusing. When you access the print function you are switching away from outline view and you are also presented with a print preview on the right side of the window. This preview will display the document as if it was printed normally not using the outline. However, when actually printing you still get the outline.
If you want to only print the outline down to a level of your choice you simply have to customize the outline view by hiding lower level items before printing it.
1
I just checked and Martin is right - this also works - and yes it IS confusing.
– yosh m
Jul 5 '11 at 20:19
3
Thanks, Martin! How naive of me to assume that the print preview actually previewed what was going to be printed, so I gave up that path and kept looking until your answer here revealed I should close my eyes, tap my heels together and believe my outline will emerge, so +1 from me! See my related question for another facet of outlining I am trying to figure out.
– Michael Sorens
Sep 9 '11 at 0:17
To clarify, while viewing your document in the Outline view use the normal print function; it will print in Outline view, despite what the Print Preview says. (Confirmed in Word 2016)
– Nick May
May 10 '16 at 13:08
add a comment |
up vote
17
down vote
The generel procedure to print the outline (with headers indented etc.) is to switch to outline view and then select the print function.
However, at least in Word 2010 this might be a bit confusing. When you access the print function you are switching away from outline view and you are also presented with a print preview on the right side of the window. This preview will display the document as if it was printed normally not using the outline. However, when actually printing you still get the outline.
If you want to only print the outline down to a level of your choice you simply have to customize the outline view by hiding lower level items before printing it.
1
I just checked and Martin is right - this also works - and yes it IS confusing.
– yosh m
Jul 5 '11 at 20:19
3
Thanks, Martin! How naive of me to assume that the print preview actually previewed what was going to be printed, so I gave up that path and kept looking until your answer here revealed I should close my eyes, tap my heels together and believe my outline will emerge, so +1 from me! See my related question for another facet of outlining I am trying to figure out.
– Michael Sorens
Sep 9 '11 at 0:17
To clarify, while viewing your document in the Outline view use the normal print function; it will print in Outline view, despite what the Print Preview says. (Confirmed in Word 2016)
– Nick May
May 10 '16 at 13:08
add a comment |
up vote
17
down vote
up vote
17
down vote
The generel procedure to print the outline (with headers indented etc.) is to switch to outline view and then select the print function.
However, at least in Word 2010 this might be a bit confusing. When you access the print function you are switching away from outline view and you are also presented with a print preview on the right side of the window. This preview will display the document as if it was printed normally not using the outline. However, when actually printing you still get the outline.
If you want to only print the outline down to a level of your choice you simply have to customize the outline view by hiding lower level items before printing it.
The generel procedure to print the outline (with headers indented etc.) is to switch to outline view and then select the print function.
However, at least in Word 2010 this might be a bit confusing. When you access the print function you are switching away from outline view and you are also presented with a print preview on the right side of the window. This preview will display the document as if it was printed normally not using the outline. However, when actually printing you still get the outline.
If you want to only print the outline down to a level of your choice you simply have to customize the outline view by hiding lower level items before printing it.
answered Apr 6 '11 at 16:32
Martin Liversage
89111020
89111020
1
I just checked and Martin is right - this also works - and yes it IS confusing.
– yosh m
Jul 5 '11 at 20:19
3
Thanks, Martin! How naive of me to assume that the print preview actually previewed what was going to be printed, so I gave up that path and kept looking until your answer here revealed I should close my eyes, tap my heels together and believe my outline will emerge, so +1 from me! See my related question for another facet of outlining I am trying to figure out.
– Michael Sorens
Sep 9 '11 at 0:17
To clarify, while viewing your document in the Outline view use the normal print function; it will print in Outline view, despite what the Print Preview says. (Confirmed in Word 2016)
– Nick May
May 10 '16 at 13:08
add a comment |
1
I just checked and Martin is right - this also works - and yes it IS confusing.
– yosh m
Jul 5 '11 at 20:19
3
Thanks, Martin! How naive of me to assume that the print preview actually previewed what was going to be printed, so I gave up that path and kept looking until your answer here revealed I should close my eyes, tap my heels together and believe my outline will emerge, so +1 from me! See my related question for another facet of outlining I am trying to figure out.
– Michael Sorens
Sep 9 '11 at 0:17
To clarify, while viewing your document in the Outline view use the normal print function; it will print in Outline view, despite what the Print Preview says. (Confirmed in Word 2016)
– Nick May
May 10 '16 at 13:08
1
1
I just checked and Martin is right - this also works - and yes it IS confusing.
– yosh m
Jul 5 '11 at 20:19
I just checked and Martin is right - this also works - and yes it IS confusing.
– yosh m
Jul 5 '11 at 20:19
3
3
Thanks, Martin! How naive of me to assume that the print preview actually previewed what was going to be printed, so I gave up that path and kept looking until your answer here revealed I should close my eyes, tap my heels together and believe my outline will emerge, so +1 from me! See my related question for another facet of outlining I am trying to figure out.
– Michael Sorens
Sep 9 '11 at 0:17
Thanks, Martin! How naive of me to assume that the print preview actually previewed what was going to be printed, so I gave up that path and kept looking until your answer here revealed I should close my eyes, tap my heels together and believe my outline will emerge, so +1 from me! See my related question for another facet of outlining I am trying to figure out.
– Michael Sorens
Sep 9 '11 at 0:17
To clarify, while viewing your document in the Outline view use the normal print function; it will print in Outline view, despite what the Print Preview says. (Confirmed in Word 2016)
– Nick May
May 10 '16 at 13:08
To clarify, while viewing your document in the Outline view use the normal print function; it will print in Outline view, despite what the Print Preview says. (Confirmed in Word 2016)
– Nick May
May 10 '16 at 13:08
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
This was driving me crazy, too. Finally I found the way to do it. Instead of using the regular Print command (which switches to regular Print Layout view & shows you a print preview), you need to use the Quick Print command.
Here are a couple ways to access it:
- On the Quick Access Toolbar (usually it is above the Tabs in the window's title bar on the left side), press on the down-arrow to customize it. You'll see one of the commands you can choose is Quick Print. Select it to add it to the Quick Access Toolbar.
- Use the Search Commands tab (a tool available from the Office Labs site at http://www.officelabs.com/projects/searchcommands/ ) and search for Print or Quick Print - it'll show up in the results.
Now - how do you use it? First, set your Default Printer to the printer you want to use. Second, put your document in Outline view and arrange what you want to have shown (i.e., how many levels, etc.). Then press the Quick Print button and presto - it prints out what is on the screen, without switching to the Print Layout, i.e., in the Outline view.
1
People who use Quick Print should know that it sends your document to the printer immediately without asking for any confirmation. If you want to choose the number of pages to print, etc., you're out of luck.
– Alan
Jun 29 '16 at 19:31
You, sir or madam, are a life saver!
– BeNice
Jul 28 '17 at 11:59
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
This was driving me crazy, too. Finally I found the way to do it. Instead of using the regular Print command (which switches to regular Print Layout view & shows you a print preview), you need to use the Quick Print command.
Here are a couple ways to access it:
- On the Quick Access Toolbar (usually it is above the Tabs in the window's title bar on the left side), press on the down-arrow to customize it. You'll see one of the commands you can choose is Quick Print. Select it to add it to the Quick Access Toolbar.
- Use the Search Commands tab (a tool available from the Office Labs site at http://www.officelabs.com/projects/searchcommands/ ) and search for Print or Quick Print - it'll show up in the results.
Now - how do you use it? First, set your Default Printer to the printer you want to use. Second, put your document in Outline view and arrange what you want to have shown (i.e., how many levels, etc.). Then press the Quick Print button and presto - it prints out what is on the screen, without switching to the Print Layout, i.e., in the Outline view.
1
People who use Quick Print should know that it sends your document to the printer immediately without asking for any confirmation. If you want to choose the number of pages to print, etc., you're out of luck.
– Alan
Jun 29 '16 at 19:31
You, sir or madam, are a life saver!
– BeNice
Jul 28 '17 at 11:59
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
up vote
5
down vote
This was driving me crazy, too. Finally I found the way to do it. Instead of using the regular Print command (which switches to regular Print Layout view & shows you a print preview), you need to use the Quick Print command.
Here are a couple ways to access it:
- On the Quick Access Toolbar (usually it is above the Tabs in the window's title bar on the left side), press on the down-arrow to customize it. You'll see one of the commands you can choose is Quick Print. Select it to add it to the Quick Access Toolbar.
- Use the Search Commands tab (a tool available from the Office Labs site at http://www.officelabs.com/projects/searchcommands/ ) and search for Print or Quick Print - it'll show up in the results.
Now - how do you use it? First, set your Default Printer to the printer you want to use. Second, put your document in Outline view and arrange what you want to have shown (i.e., how many levels, etc.). Then press the Quick Print button and presto - it prints out what is on the screen, without switching to the Print Layout, i.e., in the Outline view.
This was driving me crazy, too. Finally I found the way to do it. Instead of using the regular Print command (which switches to regular Print Layout view & shows you a print preview), you need to use the Quick Print command.
Here are a couple ways to access it:
- On the Quick Access Toolbar (usually it is above the Tabs in the window's title bar on the left side), press on the down-arrow to customize it. You'll see one of the commands you can choose is Quick Print. Select it to add it to the Quick Access Toolbar.
- Use the Search Commands tab (a tool available from the Office Labs site at http://www.officelabs.com/projects/searchcommands/ ) and search for Print or Quick Print - it'll show up in the results.
Now - how do you use it? First, set your Default Printer to the printer you want to use. Second, put your document in Outline view and arrange what you want to have shown (i.e., how many levels, etc.). Then press the Quick Print button and presto - it prints out what is on the screen, without switching to the Print Layout, i.e., in the Outline view.
answered Jul 5 '11 at 20:13
yosh m
1,81831324
1,81831324
1
People who use Quick Print should know that it sends your document to the printer immediately without asking for any confirmation. If you want to choose the number of pages to print, etc., you're out of luck.
– Alan
Jun 29 '16 at 19:31
You, sir or madam, are a life saver!
– BeNice
Jul 28 '17 at 11:59
add a comment |
1
People who use Quick Print should know that it sends your document to the printer immediately without asking for any confirmation. If you want to choose the number of pages to print, etc., you're out of luck.
– Alan
Jun 29 '16 at 19:31
You, sir or madam, are a life saver!
– BeNice
Jul 28 '17 at 11:59
1
1
People who use Quick Print should know that it sends your document to the printer immediately without asking for any confirmation. If you want to choose the number of pages to print, etc., you're out of luck.
– Alan
Jun 29 '16 at 19:31
People who use Quick Print should know that it sends your document to the printer immediately without asking for any confirmation. If you want to choose the number of pages to print, etc., you're out of luck.
– Alan
Jun 29 '16 at 19:31
You, sir or madam, are a life saver!
– BeNice
Jul 28 '17 at 11:59
You, sir or madam, are a life saver!
– BeNice
Jul 28 '17 at 11:59
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
You could put in a table of contents, tied to the headings you have used, then just print the pages which have the TOC on them
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
You could put in a table of contents, tied to the headings you have used, then just print the pages which have the TOC on them
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
You could put in a table of contents, tied to the headings you have used, then just print the pages which have the TOC on them
You could put in a table of contents, tied to the headings you have used, then just print the pages which have the TOC on them
answered Nov 9 '09 at 8:48
AdamV
4,7151634
4,7151634
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
Outlining format by design will not print exactly what is shown in outline mode. If you want your document to look like what's on the screen when you print it, design it in print layout view (View tab -> Document Views -> Print Layout).
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
Outlining format by design will not print exactly what is shown in outline mode. If you want your document to look like what's on the screen when you print it, design it in print layout view (View tab -> Document Views -> Print Layout).
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
Outlining format by design will not print exactly what is shown in outline mode. If you want your document to look like what's on the screen when you print it, design it in print layout view (View tab -> Document Views -> Print Layout).
Outlining format by design will not print exactly what is shown in outline mode. If you want your document to look like what's on the screen when you print it, design it in print layout view (View tab -> Document Views -> Print Layout).
answered Nov 9 '09 at 4:01
John T
141k20291328
141k20291328
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I use a template with the same outline structure but the outline levels I do not want to appear are formatted as "hidden." Then when the outline in the document to be printed changes I copy the entire document (Select All—Copy.) In my print template I replace the out dated text with the copied version using Paste Special "Formatted Text RTF" option.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I use a template with the same outline structure but the outline levels I do not want to appear are formatted as "hidden." Then when the outline in the document to be printed changes I copy the entire document (Select All—Copy.) In my print template I replace the out dated text with the copied version using Paste Special "Formatted Text RTF" option.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
I use a template with the same outline structure but the outline levels I do not want to appear are formatted as "hidden." Then when the outline in the document to be printed changes I copy the entire document (Select All—Copy.) In my print template I replace the out dated text with the copied version using Paste Special "Formatted Text RTF" option.
I use a template with the same outline structure but the outline levels I do not want to appear are formatted as "hidden." Then when the outline in the document to be printed changes I copy the entire document (Select All—Copy.) In my print template I replace the out dated text with the copied version using Paste Special "Formatted Text RTF" option.
answered Feb 5 '11 at 18:05
Michael Franks
111
111
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
The best way to print an outline is to apply a different style outline to the document, I believe. In Word 2013: Select All, Multilevel List (Dropdown Menu, under HOME), [select any list with HEADING 1-------, HEADING 2------- following it].
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
The best way to print an outline is to apply a different style outline to the document, I believe. In Word 2013: Select All, Multilevel List (Dropdown Menu, under HOME), [select any list with HEADING 1-------, HEADING 2------- following it].
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
The best way to print an outline is to apply a different style outline to the document, I believe. In Word 2013: Select All, Multilevel List (Dropdown Menu, under HOME), [select any list with HEADING 1-------, HEADING 2------- following it].
The best way to print an outline is to apply a different style outline to the document, I believe. In Word 2013: Select All, Multilevel List (Dropdown Menu, under HOME), [select any list with HEADING 1-------, HEADING 2------- following it].
answered Nov 28 '13 at 3:17
travis
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Ta for the suggestions. I also wanted to copy only a particular level. Don't know much about styles, so instead tried highlighting the desired level(s) in outline view, then printing, yes, but to One Note as the 'printer'. Need to have the One Note 2013 application in the Office suite to do this, and need to specify ONE Note as the 'printer'.
You can then copy from One Note back into a word file. Handy for flipping chapters or headings about, without worrying about the contents. If you copy the headings in outline view straight across to another Word file, it also drags all the 'descendent' levels with it, which is NOT what is required. Word in effect 'filters' out the undesired levels when it sends them to the 'printer' which is a handy feature.
On another Outline-related matter, I would love to know about an outliner in which you could specify ONE LEVEL ONLY (not all the levels down to say, level 3) to print out. A really good outliner would do this.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Ta for the suggestions. I also wanted to copy only a particular level. Don't know much about styles, so instead tried highlighting the desired level(s) in outline view, then printing, yes, but to One Note as the 'printer'. Need to have the One Note 2013 application in the Office suite to do this, and need to specify ONE Note as the 'printer'.
You can then copy from One Note back into a word file. Handy for flipping chapters or headings about, without worrying about the contents. If you copy the headings in outline view straight across to another Word file, it also drags all the 'descendent' levels with it, which is NOT what is required. Word in effect 'filters' out the undesired levels when it sends them to the 'printer' which is a handy feature.
On another Outline-related matter, I would love to know about an outliner in which you could specify ONE LEVEL ONLY (not all the levels down to say, level 3) to print out. A really good outliner would do this.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Ta for the suggestions. I also wanted to copy only a particular level. Don't know much about styles, so instead tried highlighting the desired level(s) in outline view, then printing, yes, but to One Note as the 'printer'. Need to have the One Note 2013 application in the Office suite to do this, and need to specify ONE Note as the 'printer'.
You can then copy from One Note back into a word file. Handy for flipping chapters or headings about, without worrying about the contents. If you copy the headings in outline view straight across to another Word file, it also drags all the 'descendent' levels with it, which is NOT what is required. Word in effect 'filters' out the undesired levels when it sends them to the 'printer' which is a handy feature.
On another Outline-related matter, I would love to know about an outliner in which you could specify ONE LEVEL ONLY (not all the levels down to say, level 3) to print out. A really good outliner would do this.
Ta for the suggestions. I also wanted to copy only a particular level. Don't know much about styles, so instead tried highlighting the desired level(s) in outline view, then printing, yes, but to One Note as the 'printer'. Need to have the One Note 2013 application in the Office suite to do this, and need to specify ONE Note as the 'printer'.
You can then copy from One Note back into a word file. Handy for flipping chapters or headings about, without worrying about the contents. If you copy the headings in outline view straight across to another Word file, it also drags all the 'descendent' levels with it, which is NOT what is required. Word in effect 'filters' out the undesired levels when it sends them to the 'printer' which is a handy feature.
On another Outline-related matter, I would love to know about an outliner in which you could specify ONE LEVEL ONLY (not all the levels down to say, level 3) to print out. A really good outliner would do this.
answered May 9 '14 at 5:59
thank you folks
11
11
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Microsoft XPS Writer is the only way I found to print the outline view exactly as it is. It looks like a PDF document but keeps all the formatting without defaulting to the main document. Microsoft XPS Writer is an optional printer.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Microsoft XPS Writer is the only way I found to print the outline view exactly as it is. It looks like a PDF document but keeps all the formatting without defaulting to the main document. Microsoft XPS Writer is an optional printer.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Microsoft XPS Writer is the only way I found to print the outline view exactly as it is. It looks like a PDF document but keeps all the formatting without defaulting to the main document. Microsoft XPS Writer is an optional printer.
Microsoft XPS Writer is the only way I found to print the outline view exactly as it is. It looks like a PDF document but keeps all the formatting without defaulting to the main document. Microsoft XPS Writer is an optional printer.
answered Apr 3 '15 at 21:36
guest
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
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StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
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StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
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Post as a guest
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StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
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Sign up using Google
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Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown