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Suzanne S. Barnhill
 
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Default How to reformat a complete document.

If it does all that, it's definitely worth trying, but I would guess it
would works well only if you could open the doc in WP and copy. I don't see
how such a copy/paste would get rid of the section breaks after the document
had been opened in Word.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so
all may benefit.

"AnnieB" wrote in message
...
IME it does get rid of the dreaded plethora (*lots* is an understatement!)

of
Section Breaks (continuous) and otherwise) left over from WP. Otherwise I
couldn't have counted on using this process over the years. My experience

is
with Word 2000, XP, and 2003 vs. WordPerfect docs of much dubious

heritage,
age, and funkiness of their own. And ... it often gets rid of those nasty

WP
Typographic Symbols (is that the correct expression?)



"Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote:

The final paragraph contains *formatting,* not corruption; that's why

you
don't copy it. But this approach won't help if the WP document contains
section breaks, which Word will think it does if the margins or
header/footer change between pages; a converted WP doc will contain

*lots*
of section breaks.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the

newsgroup so
all may benefit.

"AnnieB" wrote in message
...
Wanda,

If you have a number of WordPerfect files which you expect to use in

Word,
here are a few ideas:

1) Investigate Levit & James (www.levitjames.com) product named

CrossWords.
This product does an incredible job converting WP documents to Word.

Many
law firms use this product. I've used it in many conversions from WP

to
Word. They provide excellent service and assistance in fine tuning

the
conversion for your set of WP documents.

2) Investigate MicroSystems (www.microsystems.com) - they also provide

WP
to
Word conversion capabilities. Their approach is different from Levit &

James.
I have never used Microsystems WP to Word conversion product/system.

3) If neither of the above is a possibility, here's a taste of the

approach
I take at law firms who cannot or will not use the Levit & James

product
(CrossWords.) The approach works because it is based on the way Word

works.

Create a template containing a standard set of styles relevant to your
documents. (This is usually done by the consultant working with the

help
desk or the "Word" person at the firm.) Make sure this template's

page
layout is as you desire. To improve Word's justification ( which is

pretty
crappy), go to Tools, Options, Compatibility and choose "Do full
justification like WordPerfect 6.x for Windows". This template will

be
your
"container" for the text in the old WP doc. (One other thought - I

have
seen
way too many Normal templates with screwed up page layout,

compatibility,
etc. I am almost tempted to say close Word, blow away your Normal

template
and then open Word. It regenerates the Normal template.)

It is helpful to print the WP document, so you can refer to it for
formatting. Maybe your documents are not as long or rigidly formatted

as
some legal documents, so you may not have to print the document.

Open the WP document in Word. Select all text EXCEPT the last

paragraph
mark. As far back as Word 1.1 we knew that this last paragraph mark

can
contain corruption and it can be helpful to not copy it.

Open a document based on the template discussed above which contains

your
standard set of styles. The choose Edit, Paste Special, Unformatted

Text.

Now you have unformatted text in a Word container.

Before you fixate on formatting paragraphs, words, etc. you should

continue
to work in a "top down" fashion. Insert Section Breaks where needed.

Start
at the first section and make page layout changes for that section as
desired. Set up your page numbering in this first section, as

desired.
(BTW
- Insert, Page Number from the menu is to be avoided. I have seen

(and
read)
that the "frame" (what is it called nowadays?) in which the page

number is
placed can cause comparison problems when using, for example, a

comparison
product like DeltaView. There are other issues as well with that

damned
Insert, Page Number.) Proceed to the next section and make page

layout
changes, set up page numbering; continue on this way.

Now you have a Word container whose sections are properly formatted,
containing unformatted text. Now you can apply styles, and then

proceed
to
formatting words (characters.)

If you need to generate a TOC, TOA, or set up automatic paragraph

numbering;
or you need tables, etc. you can proceed in those directions, knowing

the
container for your document is nicely set.

Maybe this helps ..? Or might have been overkill!

AnnieB







"wanda" wrote:

I have a document in word office - document was transferred from an

old
word
perfect program. After downloading the document, the format is

wrong.