View Single Post
  #3   Report Post  
AndyBear
 
Posts: n/a
Default

The one thing that pre-2003 versions of Word did not do was 'copy' the
bookmarks from the source file into the target file when the link between the
source and target files was formed. But I guess the comment about 2003
showing more bookmarks than before addresses this too.

It just seems a little silly/wrong as:
a) When you look in the list of bookmarks for a file you can't tell anymore
which bookmarks are the 'master' ones - i.e. which ones really do originate
from the current source file - rather than some source document you have
linked to where those links contain bookmarks. Therefore it makes documents
sharing information with each other via links much harder to manage.

b) If a bookmark with the same name as the one being linked too already
exists in the file then the bookmark isn't copied over; it should at least
pick a bookmark name at 'random' for the new bookmark in the target file, for
consistency reasons, if nothing else. Otherwise, why the change from 2000?

c) Even when the source text doesn't contain a bookmark, the process of
creating the link adds one to the source document (which is OK obviously) and
this too is copied as a bookmark entry into the target document (which isn't,
IMHO).

Thanks anyway though, guess I'll just have to live with it. Or delete the
bookmarks as they get copied over...

--

"Cindy M -WordMVP-" wrote:

Hi ?B?QW5keUJlYXI=?=,

I am using Word 2003 now (2000 up to now) and I am finding that when I:
select text in a source document that contains bookmarks; swap to my target
document; select 'Edit' | 'Paste Special' and 'HTML Format' & 'Paste Link' -
I end up with the nice html formatted hyperlink as I did in 2000, but now,
the bookmarks from the source document show up [] in the link *and* they have
been copied to the target document as real bookmark entries (i.e. show up in
the Bookmark list ('Insert' | 'Bookmarks')). This never used to happen

Indeed, all versions of Word, back through 6.0, have done this. The only time
you might not have picked up the bookmarks is if they already existed in the
target file.

but they were always
'hidden bookmarks' so I never saw it?

Possibly. That would depend on how they're named; bookmarks with names beginning
with an underscore won't be visible unless the "Hidden bookmarks" checkbox is
activated (deactivated and reactivated). I do believe Word 2003 tends to display
more bookmarks than Word 2000 did, but I've never really thought about the
details, because I like seeing bookmarks.

Cindy Meister
INTER-Solutions, Switzerland
http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindymeister (last update Jun 8 2004)
http://www.word.mvps.org

This reply is posted in the Newsgroup; please post any follow question or reply
in the newsgroup and not by e-mail :-)