JR Raphael
Contributing Editor

9 fast fixes for common Google Docs problems

how-to
Oct 2, 202515 mins

Knock down distressing Docs issues in no time with these easy-to-implement, expert-approved solutions.

Google Docs fixes
Credit: Google / Rob Schultz

Once upon a time, a word processor was little more than a blank canvas for your finger-transmitted musings: Youโ€™d open up the program, type whatever you wanted โ€” and, well, that was pretty much it.

These days, dealing with documents has practically become an art. And even though Google Docs is among the more approachable options out there (paging Microsoft Office Ribbonโ€ฆ), the service has grown surprisingly multilayered as of late.

For the most part, thatโ€™s a good thing. Docs is still generally quite easy to use, and it packs more than enough punch for most common word processing purposes. But sometimes, the layers of complexity can lead to cloud-sized headaches that are anything but light and fluffy.

Today, weโ€™ll think through some of the most common Docs challenges and the fastest ways to fix โ€™em. Whether youโ€™re responsible for only your own Docs usage or you act as the go-to troubleshooter for your office, friend group, or family (be it on an official basis or in one of those lovely unpaid โ€œtech supportโ€ positions), this is the reference you need to solve whatever woes may come your way.

Note that most of the issues described here are specific to the Docs web interface for desktop browsers, which is far more fully featured and complex than the serviceโ€™s mobile app equivalents.

Google Docs problem #1: Edit regret

Documents often represent hours upon hours of precious work โ€” and once theyโ€™re gone, ideas arenโ€™t always easy to get back. So what happens when a member of your team (who may or may not be, erm, you) makes a change to a Google Docs document that you later come to realize was a mistake?

Sure, thereโ€™s the universal Undo command โ€” Ctrl-Z (or โŒ˜-Z, on a Mac), which can also be found in Docsโ€™ Edit menu โ€” but that works only if youโ€™re the one who made the edit in question and if you just did it. If someone else is to blame, if youโ€™ve navigated away from the document since the change got made, or if youโ€™ve made a bunch of other changes since then that you do want to keep, Undo isnโ€™t gonna do you a lick of good.

So hereโ€™s the fix: Remember to rely on Docsโ€™ robust Version History system. You can find it in the File menu or by using the Ctrl-Alt-Shift-H (or โŒ˜-Alt-Shift-H) keyboard shortcut.

There, youโ€™ll find versions of your document that were autosaved at different points and can be zapped directly back over as full replacements for the current version of your document.

The complicating issue, though, is that those versions are saved only sporadically, which means you may or may not find one from the precise point youโ€™d like to restore. The best way around that is to manually force Docs to save a version anytime you reach a milestone or youโ€™re expecting major changes to be made. That way, you always know you have a quick โ€˜nโ€™ easy way to get back to the way things were before โ€” or at the very least to view your pre-shakeup version as a point of reference.

To manually force Docs to save a version of your document, open the File menu, click โ€œVersion history,โ€ then select โ€œName current version.โ€ Give the version any name you want โ€” Iโ€™m partial to Clancy, myself, but feel free to use something more descriptive โ€” and then that exact state of your document will always be available and easily identifiable within the main Version History menu.

version history in google docs showing several older versions of the current document

Relying on Google Docsโ€™ Version History feature can be a real lifesaver,  especially if you remember to manually save and name versions before  major edits are made.

JR Raphael / Foundry

Google Docs problem #2: Case craziness

Have you ever pasted over text from an email, a web page, or some other source and then realized parts of it were in a wacky ALL CAPS format? Or maybe youโ€™re working on editing a document and need all the headings to exist in title case in order to look correct. Whatever the, ahem, case may be, save yourself the hassle of manually transforming all that text and let Docs do the heavy lifting.

Just highlight the text in question, click the Format menu at the top of the screen, then click โ€œTextโ€ followed by โ€œCapitalization.โ€ There, deep in the Docs menu structure, youโ€™ll find a one-click tool for changing whatever text you selected into all lowercase, all uppercase, or title case โ€” with no time wasted and only minimal effort required.

Google Docs problem #3: Auto-format frustration

By default, Google Docs performs some formatting magic thatโ€™s meant to be helpful but can often be annoying. For instance, the service will automatically capitalize the first word of every sentence you type, itโ€™ll change all the quotation marks you enter from the standard straight-quote style into the controversial curly-quote style, and itโ€™ll add a hyperlink onto any web address you enter into a document.

Docs also changes standard three-character ellipses (โ€ฆ) into single-character ellipses (โ€ฆ), using a Unicode symbol for that piece of punctuation. It adjusts normal numerical fractions (like 1/2) into single-character symbols (like ยฝ), too, and it changes certain abbreviations (like c/o) into their single-character Unicode symbol equivalents (like โ„…).

For certain purposes, those changes might be pleasant โ€” but just as often, theyโ€™re obnoxious. Fear not, though, for you can disable every one of those behaviors and tell Docs to leave your original text alone.

The secret resides in an easily overlooked two-part preferences menu. To get there, click the Tools menu at the top of the Docs desktop interface, then select โ€œPreferencesโ€ from the list of options that comes up. There, youโ€™ll see a list of options for some of Docsโ€™ more basic text substitution habits.

google docs preferences menu general tab

You can disable basic text substitution patterns in the Docs โ€œPreferencesโ€ menu.

JR Raphael / Foundry

That area allows you to turn off the auto-capitalization, allegedly โ€œsmartโ€ quote transformation, and automatic link formatting, among other things. As for the fractions and other more advanced forms of text substitutions, youโ€™ll need to click on the โ€œSubstitutionsโ€ header at the top of that same window to find โ€™em โ€” and then uncheck the box next to any substitutions you want to blast away.

google docs preferences menu substitutions tab

The โ€œSubstitutionsโ€ section of that menu lets you take total control over how Docs messes with your text.

JR Raphael / Foundry

Ahhโ€ฆthe glass is suddenly looking 1/2 full instead of ยฝ empty, isnโ€™t it?

Google Docs problem #4: Default font disappointment

Speaking of Docs defaults, maybe you arenโ€™t entirely thrilled with the fonts or font sizes Docs generally offers. Maybe youโ€™re more of a Courier New kind of person โ€” or maybe you like your headings to be huge, blue, and single-spaced.

Whatever manner of font and spacing style you prefer for your current project, you donโ€™t have to resign yourself to manually making all the changes every time you start a new document. Instead, just edit Docsโ€™ font defaults to make โ€™em look and work exactly the way you like.

The simplest way to do that is to create some text that you want to use as your default for one format or another โ€” normal text, title text, subtitle text, or one of six available heading styles. Once the text looks exactly the way you want, click the Format menu, select โ€œParagraph styles,โ€ and select whichever type of text youโ€™d like to follow that appearance from here on out. Then, just look for the option to update that text type to follow your current formatting.

google docs paragraph styles > normal text > update normal text to match menu sequence

You can change Docsโ€™ default fonts with a couple quick clicks.

JR Raphael / Foundry

All youโ€™ve gotta do is select that option, then do the same thing for any other text formats you want to adjust. Once youโ€™ve got everything set, click Format once more โ€” and this time, select โ€œParagraph stylesโ€ followed by โ€œOptionsโ€ and then โ€œSave as my default styles.โ€ All your adjustments will then be saved to your Google account, and any new documents you create from that point forward with that specific account will use those styles instead of the standard Docs defaults.

Google Docs problem #5: Grammar police overreach

Docs loves to tell you when youโ€™ve got something wrong with your grammar, which can certainly be useful at times. But it can also be incredibly irritating โ€” if, say, you deliberately bend the rules for certain reasons or rely on highly stylized approaches and find yourself distracted by all the squiggly red underlines pointing out things that arenโ€™t actually problems. (Been there, done that.)

If that frustration sounds familiar, give yourself a break by disabling Docsโ€™ grammar suggestions โ€” whether permanently or just for a little while, on an as-needed basis. You can find the command to do so in the Tools menu, under โ€œProofreadโ€ and then โ€œProofread settings.โ€ Just uncheck the box next to โ€œGrammarโ€ to deactivate it.

You can also turn off automatic spelling suggestions in that same place, if you have a brand name that uses an uncommon spelling and constantly gets corrected. (Alternatively, you can use the โ€œPersonal dictionaryโ€ option within that same top-level settings menu to add specific terms into Docsโ€™ vocabulary and keep it from thinking theyโ€™re mistakes.)

And if you find any other sorts of Docs writing suggestions to be more irksome than helpful โ€” corrections related to word choice, voice, conciseness, or sentence complexity (geez, what kind of person would create a long and winding complex sentence in an important document and not keep things as concise as possible or maybe use some awkward wording choice decisions or any other such issues and not realize it themselves without the need for corrections being made by their word processor?!) โ€” you can disable any or all of those in that same area.

Google Docs problem #6: Bullet point blues

Who doesnโ€™t love lists? Docs makes it easy to add bulleted lists into your documents, and it even has a handful of formatting options within its Format menu, under โ€œBullets & numbering,โ€ in case the basic black dot isnโ€™t doing the trick for what you need.

Those default options are pretty limited, though, and if you have anything specific in mind, they probably wonโ€™t include the symbol you want.

But wait! Docs also allows you to insert almost any symbol imaginable as your bullet list indicator. Youโ€™d just never realize it, as the option to do so only appears after youโ€™ve created a list. (Go figure.)

So try this: Create a bulleted list within a document, either by looking in the menu we just mentioned or by using the Ctrl-Shift-8 (or โŒ˜-Shift-8) shortcut. Then, with your cursor on that list, open up the Format menu and look under โ€œBullets & numberingโ€ again. This time, you should be able to select the โ€œList optionsโ€ item โ€” and once you do, you can select โ€œMore bulletsโ€ to select from a sprawling range of bullet symbol styles.

google docs bullet point options in special characters panel

Youโ€™ve got all sorts of bullet point options within Docs โ€” if you know how to find and activate them.

JR Raphael / Foundry

That same menu will also allow you to adjust the numbering on a numbered list, in case you ever need a list to revolve around something other than numbers alone (like โ€œItem No. 1,โ€ for instance) or need to have a list start on a number other than 1.

Google Docs problem #7: The envelope enigma

For as capable as Docs has gotten over the years, one feature itโ€™s curiously still missing is the ability to format a page as an envelope or as a sheet of labels for proper printing. If you need either function for your work, youโ€™ll need to turn to a third-party Google Docs add-on to get it.

The aptly named Create & Print Labels add-on will handle everything you need. Add it onto your account (or ask your admin to do it for you, if youโ€™re on a company account without direct add-on access) and then look in the Extensions menu at the top of any document to find and open it.

Click the โ€œCreate labelโ€ option within its submenu, and you can then simply select the specific type of envelope or label you want to create โ€” as well as optionally selecting an accompanying Google Sheets spreadsheet with data you want filled in on the envelopes or labels for fast โ€˜nโ€™ easy printing.

google docs with envelope in main window and labelmaker sidebar on right

Envelope and label formatting in Google Docs is surprisingly easy โ€” once you have the right add-on installed.

JR Raphael / Foundry

Create & Print Labels is free for use with a limited range of standard label formats (which will probably be plenty for most casual purposes). For access to all available formats and features, the add-on runs 30 bucks a year or $80 for a lifetime license.

Google Docs problem #8: Word count inconvenience

If you work in an area where word count is critical, take note: You donโ€™t have to dive deep into Docsโ€™ menus (or futz with the Ctrl-Shift-C or โŒ˜-Shift-C shortcut) every time you want to check in on your current document length.

At some point, Docs gained the ability to show you a running total of the words in your document as you go. Once activated, the count appears in a handy little box in the lower-left corner of your screen. Clicking it will expand it to show your total page count, too, along with your character count (both with and without spaces).

google docs word count dialog box with display word count while typing checked

With Docsโ€™ persistent word count option enabled, youโ€™ll always see a running word count in the lower-left corner of the screen.

JR Raphael / Foundry

To turn that feature on, click the Tools menu and then select โ€œWord countโ€ โ€” or use that Ctrl-Shift-C or โŒ˜-Shift-C shortcut we mentioned a moment ago โ€” and then check the box next to โ€œDisplay word count while typingโ€ in the pop-up that appears.

Google Docs problem #9: Missing menu item madness

Last but not least, no way around it: Docs has a lot of options, a lot of menus, and a lot of options within menus (and options within menus within menus, for that matter). Itโ€™s not quite an Office-Ribbon-caliber nightmare, but it can be a lot to process โ€” and finding the command you need isnโ€™t always easy.

If youโ€™re ever hunting for a certain menu item within Docs, save yourself the trouble of digging and instead hit Alt and the forward-slash key (/) together. (On a Mac, hit the Option and / keys together.) Thatโ€™ll pull up a fast-search box thatโ€™ll let you type a few letters of the command youโ€™re looking for to find anything in a flash.

Bonus Google Docs problem: Word weirdness

Thereโ€™s just one more Docs-related fix to address, and itโ€™s related to the way the service interacts with Microsoft Word files. To explore that issue and get into some other relevant experience-improving suggestions, head over to the previous chapter in my โ€œfast fixesโ€ series: โ€œ8 fast fixes for common Google Drive problems.โ€

This article was originally published in May 2021 and updated in October 2025.

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JR Raphael

JR Raphael is obsessed with productivity and finding clever ways to make the most of modern technology. He's written about almost everything imaginable at some point โ€” including even construction, crime, and climate in his past life as a TV news producer โ€” but these days, he's known primarily for his unmatched analysis of Google's Android and ChromeOS platforms (both of which he's covered closely since their starts) along with his knack for digging up off-the-beaten-path tech tips and treasures.

JR writes Computerworld's Android Intelligence column โ€” the internet's longest-standing Android column and one he's conducted since its inception way back in 2010 โ€” along with a variety of practical pieces about business productivity. That aside, he's the founder and editorial director of The Intelligence, where he waxes poetic with his calorie-packed Android Intelligence newsletter (a saucy sibling to the same-named CW column) as well as his cross-platform Cool Tools recommendation station. He is also a contributing editor at Fast Company and has written or been cited in everywhere from The Verge and Mental Floss to The New York Times, ABC World News, and USA Today.

(Random trivia: JR was actually quoted in Walter Isaacsonโ€™s best-selling biography of Steve Jobs โ€” for, erm, somewhat salacious and very appropriately Android-related reasons.)

Despite his refusal to comb his hair, JR's work has been honored with a gaggle of awards over the years โ€” including two Emmys, three Murrows, and a smattering of top distinctions from the Associated Press. He has also received a handful of coveted Azbee Awards for standout business reporting, most recently in recognition of his in-depth exposรฉ of Google's business-aimed Android phone recommendations.

In his spare time, JR enjoys breathing, chewing, and staring aimlessly into space.

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