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Suzanne S. Barnhill Suzanne S. Barnhill is offline
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Default Styles in global templates

You could get something close to the functionality you describe if you used
documents as templates. You'd have a base template containing the styles and
then a document representing each of your current templates. The documents
would have "Automatically update document styles" enabled (at least at
creation of a new document). Users would then use the "From existing
document" choice in the New Document task pane to create new documents based
on these "template" documents.

I suspect you will find this idea as abhorrent as I do, and users would
undoubtedly make a hash of it, but that's the only way I can think of to get
the functionality you describe.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA

"Michael Mannion" wrote in message
...
Greetings,

I've spent a fair amount of time over the past few years crafting some
templates for my company which, at this point, are relatively mature and
serving their purposes well in production. The primary customized content
in these templates comprises styles. I am obsessive about tagging every
piece of text with a style, and never overriding the style with manual
formatting. This, coupled with a resistance to adding new styles - in
order keep the total number of styles to a minimum and, in turn, usable -
has yielded a collection of documents that are easy to reference,
reformat, and reuse for other purposes. So far so good.

I am now in the process of moving from Word 2003 to Word 2007. Aside from
the minor release-specific adjustments I need to make, this also presents
and opportunity to re-visit the templates, en masse, and clean up any
issues that have arisen over the past few years.

The one nagging problem I have not been able to fix during this overhaul,
however, has to do with sharing styles among templates. This is not a Word
2007 issue, per se, but rather a generic one that I am just endeavoring to
understand concurrently with my release upgrade. In brief:

o All of my templates share a common set of styles

o Each template differs only in the page layout (headers/footers,
watermarks, etc.)

What I would like to do is have one core template that stores all of the
custom styles, and make the other templates (with the customized page
layouts) reference the core style template.

From researching this periodically over the years, I believe that I have
determined that Word does not support such 'cascading' templates for
styles - with the exception of the Normal template. I do not believe I can
rely on the Normal template to store company-wide styles, however, becuse
a separate Normal template exists for each user. I've resigned to the fact
that this is a limitation, and am not necessarily looking for a solution
here.

What I would like, however, is to understand why styles cannot be stored
in global templates. It seems that many other types of customizations -
such as macros and auto-text - can be stored in global templates which, in
turn, can be referenced by other templates in a cascading manner. Styles,
though, appear to be explicitly disallowed.

I think that I am mis-understanding something fundamental about the way
that Word works, and would like to be more informed, even if I can't solve
the techical problem I'm encountering. So, simply:

QUESTION: Why does Word not allow me to reference styles stored in a
global template?
(Alternatively, why do I have to use a document template in order to
reference styles?)

Thank you for your feedback, and for helping me sleep better at night.
Have a good day.

-Michael