If the document contains lots of fields, and your Word preferences are set to highlight fields as 'Always', those fields in the document will show with a grey highlight. The option can be changed from the below location: Word>Preferences>View>Field shading: 'Always' If the above does not help, follow the steps below: 1. Select the text, Go to Format >Kingoroot for mac. Borders & Shading.

In short, OS X full screen mode takes a compatible app into a “true” full screen state, occupying the entire display and hiding the menu bar and window buttons.

On the Shading Page, select None. Select the text then click the right edge of the Highlighter tool on the Formatting Toolbar & choose None.

There is an option to 'show preview' that can be ticked off in the settings of the Messages app: Go to Settings> Notification> Messaging. Stated another way: 1) Go to Settings = Click on the GEAR icon (System Preferences) 2) The top-most section of System Preferences on My Mac is labeled 'Personal' at the far right is 'Notifications' (a black square with a red dot in the center) 3) Click that square and the dialogue window will show a list on the left which should include 'Messages' with a sub title 'Badges and Sounds' 4) Click that item in the list on the left and you will notice on the right side, toward the top it has three options (the default is Banners). Click the item to the left of Banners (should be None). Now you can press CMD+Q on your keyboard to close System Prefs and the alerts will stop popping up in the upper right of your screen (you may want to test it) This was an issue for me because I was allowing one of my staff to use my Macbook for some training and all my personal iMessages kept popping up in front of her - NOT COOL. This ended that problem. This is not possible with the currently available notification options and configuration of Notification Centre. The three options you have are • No notifications • Banner • Banners that stay until clicked You have no control over the content of the message, its just shows what is sent by the notifying application.

So looking at iMessages, there is no way to change or limit the notifications that are sent by default to the Notification Centre. So the only solution I can come up with is to turn off iMessage notifications completely in Notification Centre Then using iMessage's built in ability to run Applescripts when events are triggered, then send your own notifications without the offending content (more private IMHO for work machines) to Notification Centre by using third party scripts.

Mac

Of course, those notifications would have your own defined content and would also have to come from an application that is enabled in Notification Centre. Might give you a start on how to create a notification that can be called from Applescript.