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Bob Buckland ?:-\) Bob   Buckland ?:-\) is offline
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Default Navigation Links on Web Page w/o Using Frames

Hi Daiya,

Wellll, not quite impossible.
Word 2000 thru 2007 (at least in the Windows versions g) do support HTML frame pages (in Word's unique way g).

In Word 2003, for example,
Format=Frames=New Frames Page
automatically switches the view to 'Web Layout' and brings up the'Frames' toolbar and the Insert=Hyperlink dialog box [Target]
feature should include a choice of frames in a frameset.

In Word 2000 and 2002 it was a bit easier, as the Word Web Page Wizard (discontinued after Word 2002) could build a web page with
frames for you and you could tweak it from there.

In Word 2007 you can open an older version document or template that has a user created new toolbar (Tools=Customize in the older
version) that contains the commands from the older 'Frames' toolbar or in Word 2007 add to the Quick Access Toolbar (QAT) the
commands for

Frames
Delete Frame
New Frame Above
New Frame Below
New Frame Left
New Frame Right
New Frames Page (also included in 'Frames ')
Web Design Mode

The commands for
Frame Properties and
Save Current Frame As
will be on the right click menu.

Each 'web frame' is stored as a separate Word document and how those are managed (as a set or as individual files) in Windows
Explorer can depend on your Folder options in Explorer.

In Word you can use a borderless 'frame above' to hold navigation controls, similar to putting links in a Word document header, but
that wouldn't support the original poster's request to have Navigation links on a Word Web Document w/o using frames.

=======================
"Daiya Mitchell" wrote in message ...
[snip]
By the way--it's impossible to use HTML frames in Word. Word frames are completely different.
--

Bob Buckland ?:-)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*