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#1
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Is this possible...?
This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking
about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#2
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Is this possible...?
The first thing to do is to stop your colleagues using old letters as a
basis for new ones and create proper templates. http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm. which put their own reference details in the masthead automatically. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#3
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Is this possible...?
If only it were that easy! They won't do that. All the letters are on the
server and nothing will stop them using Save As... It would be better if they would just change the reference but "it has always been done like this" - i.e. when they have had previous typists. I'm only an employee and don't want to rock the boat. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... The first thing to do is to stop your colleagues using old letters as a basis for new ones and create proper templates. http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm. which put their own reference details in the masthead automatically. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#4
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Is this possible...?
Rocking the boat was always one of the most enjoyable things about working
-- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: If only it were that easy! They won't do that. All the letters are on the server and nothing will stop them using Save As... It would be better if they would just change the reference but "it has always been done like this" - i.e. when they have had previous typists. I'm only an employee and don't want to rock the boat. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... The first thing to do is to stop your colleagues using old letters as a basis for new ones and create proper templates. http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm. which put their own reference details in the masthead automatically. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#5
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Is this possible...?
Unfortunately, not in this case!
Any other ideas on the original question, please? "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Rocking the boat was always one of the most enjoyable things about working -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: If only it were that easy! They won't do that. All the letters are on the server and nothing will stop them using Save As... It would be better if they would just change the reference but "it has always been done like this" - i.e. when they have had previous typists. I'm only an employee and don't want to rock the boat. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... The first thing to do is to stop your colleagues using old letters as a basis for new ones and create proper templates. http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm. which put their own reference details in the masthead automatically. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#6
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Is this possible...?
If the users have free rein to do what they want on this PC, there is
nothing you can do about their mistakes. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org ab wrote: Unfortunately, not in this case! Any other ideas on the original question, please? "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Rocking the boat was always one of the most enjoyable things about working -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: If only it were that easy! They won't do that. All the letters are on the server and nothing will stop them using Save As... It would be better if they would just change the reference but "it has always been done like this" - i.e. when they have had previous typists. I'm only an employee and don't want to rock the boat. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... The first thing to do is to stop your colleagues using old letters as a basis for new ones and create proper templates. http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm. which put their own reference details in the masthead automatically. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#7
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Is this possible...?
If your work environment allows you to have and run macros, what you could
do is set up a special "SaveAs" macro that resides on your computer which not only saves the document but creates a Document variable with your name and the date of saving. You can't make the others change what _they_ do, but ~you~ can do something different! Ed "josi" wrote in message ... This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#8
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Is this possible...?
But is there any way I can have a 'hidden' indication of the documents I
have typed? By the way, they don't use my PC, they open the documents off the server where everything is stored. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... If the users have free rein to do what they want on this PC, there is nothing you can do about their mistakes. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org ab wrote: Unfortunately, not in this case! Any other ideas on the original question, please? "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Rocking the boat was always one of the most enjoyable things about working -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: If only it were that easy! They won't do that. All the letters are on the server and nothing will stop them using Save As... It would be better if they would just change the reference but "it has always been done like this" - i.e. when they have had previous typists. I'm only an employee and don't want to rock the boat. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... The first thing to do is to stop your colleagues using old letters as a basis for new ones and create proper templates. http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm. which put their own reference details in the masthead automatically. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#9
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Is this possible...?
Now that sounds interesting! Yes, I have and run macros but could you point
me in the right direction to find out how to do this, please. "Ed" wrote in message ... If your work environment allows you to have and run macros, what you could do is set up a special "SaveAs" macro that resides on your computer which not only saves the document but creates a Document variable with your name and the date of saving. You can't make the others change what _they_ do, but ~you~ can do something different! Ed "josi" wrote in message ... This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#10
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Is this possible...?
Read the VBA Help for the "Variable Object". Not that I'm trying to push
you off, but there's more there than what I can explain. Also do a Google groups search through groups *word* for "docvariable". Basically, you set a metadata variable in the document and assign it the value you want. Then read it using the DOCVARIABLE field. So something like this, perhaps. Sub DocVarMySave() Dim nowDate As Date ' today's date Dim varMe As Variable ' the variable to hold your data Dim strMe As String ' your data strMe = "" ' initialize to an empty string nowDate = Format(Date, "dd mmm yy") 'Loop through all vaiables in ActiveDocument For Each varMe In ActiveDocument.Variables If varMe.Name = "MySave" Then strMe = "Last saved on " & nowDate & " by josi" ' replace with your data varMe.Value = strMe End If Next varMe If strMe = "" Then ' no variable containing your data was found in this doc ' create variable and assign your initials ActiveDocument.Variables.Add Name:= "Last saved on " & nowDate & " by josi" ' replace with your data End If End Sub Then do a SaveAs. Then if there is ever a question, you would insert a DOCVARIABLE field to read it. Type Ctrl+F9 and the in between the braces put DOCVARIABLE "MySave". If the date is not when the document properties last shows it was saved, it's not yours. This isn't the greatest method, I know. But maybe it will get you started into something more helpful. Or perhpas an MVP will come along and give better advice. Cheers! Ed "ab" wrote in message ... Now that sounds interesting! Yes, I have and run macros but could you point me in the right direction to find out how to do this, please. "Ed" wrote in message ... If your work environment allows you to have and run macros, what you could do is set up a special "SaveAs" macro that resides on your computer which not only saves the document but creates a Document variable with your name and the date of saving. You can't make the others change what _they_ do, but ~you~ can do something different! Ed "josi" wrote in message ... This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#11
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Is this possible...?
josi wrote:
This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? Assuming it's an area others will type in but is always in the document: I've done something similar with emails to validate that they came from me and not an impersonator. I find a place that will always exist in them, and place a reverse apostrophe in the text. It's nearly invisible at a glance, and only people I communicate with are aware of itg. Another possibility is to use a keypad code that only you know. e.g. you could make one of the letters appear different and most people wouldn't be aware of how to duplicate it. Use it to put your own initials in Greek or some such different style works, too. Then there's hidden text, too; useful when done correctly. Kind of far out, but ... g A fill-in field might work, where you have to type in your initiatls (or theirs) whenever the file is closed? Dunno. Pop` |
#12
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Is this possible...?
If they are opening your documents then whatever they contain (hidden or
otherwise) will still be in those documents. I suppose you could insert your initials formatted as hidden within a paragraph that will be deleted, but I wouldn't rely on it. What this organisation of yours needs *badly* is some training. I suppose it will happen when one of these users deletes a valuable document. You could certainly deter them by providing a template for their new letters and password protecting your documents so they can't open them. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org ab wrote: But is there any way I can have a 'hidden' indication of the documents I have typed? By the way, they don't use my PC, they open the documents off the server where everything is stored. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... If the users have free rein to do what they want on this PC, there is nothing you can do about their mistakes. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org ab wrote: Unfortunately, not in this case! Any other ideas on the original question, please? "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Rocking the boat was always one of the most enjoyable things about working -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: If only it were that easy! They won't do that. All the letters are on the server and nothing will stop them using Save As... It would be better if they would just change the reference but "it has always been done like this" - i.e. when they have had previous typists. I'm only an employee and don't want to rock the boat. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... The first thing to do is to stop your colleagues using old letters as a basis for new ones and create proper templates. http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm. which put their own reference details in the masthead automatically. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#13
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Is this possible...?
I would love to do that, Graham. I totally agree they need training but
until they see the need, I'll have to put up with it! More than my jobs worth to password protect my documents. I only work part time and they often have to open my documents, which are left on the server, so that's not an option anyway. I have been looking into other suggestions about a macro but I am not sure that would achieve what I'm looking for - even if I understood how to set it up. I'll keep trying. Thanks for your help. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... If they are opening your documents then whatever they contain (hidden or otherwise) will still be in those documents. I suppose you could insert your initials formatted as hidden within a paragraph that will be deleted, but I wouldn't rely on it. What this organisation of yours needs *badly* is some training. I suppose it will happen when one of these users deletes a valuable document. You could certainly deter them by providing a template for their new letters and password protecting your documents so they can't open them. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org ab wrote: But is there any way I can have a 'hidden' indication of the documents I have typed? By the way, they don't use my PC, they open the documents off the server where everything is stored. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... If the users have free rein to do what they want on this PC, there is nothing you can do about their mistakes. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org ab wrote: Unfortunately, not in this case! Any other ideas on the original question, please? "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Rocking the boat was always one of the most enjoyable things about working -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: If only it were that easy! They won't do that. All the letters are on the server and nothing will stop them using Save As... It would be better if they would just change the reference but "it has always been done like this" - i.e. when they have had previous typists. I'm only an employee and don't want to rock the boat. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... The first thing to do is to stop your colleagues using old letters as a basis for new ones and create proper templates. http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm. which put their own reference details in the masthead automatically. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#14
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Is this possible...?
I think Graham was thinking of a password to modify, not password to open,
but that wouldn't keep them from using Save As, so we're back where we started. -- 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. "josi" wrote in message ... I would love to do that, Graham. I totally agree they need training but until they see the need, I'll have to put up with it! More than my jobs worth to password protect my documents. I only work part time and they often have to open my documents, which are left on the server, so that's not an option anyway. I have been looking into other suggestions about a macro but I am not sure that would achieve what I'm looking for - even if I understood how to set it up. I'll keep trying. Thanks for your help. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... If they are opening your documents then whatever they contain (hidden or otherwise) will still be in those documents. I suppose you could insert your initials formatted as hidden within a paragraph that will be deleted, but I wouldn't rely on it. What this organisation of yours needs *badly* is some training. I suppose it will happen when one of these users deletes a valuable document. You could certainly deter them by providing a template for their new letters and password protecting your documents so they can't open them. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org ab wrote: But is there any way I can have a 'hidden' indication of the documents I have typed? By the way, they don't use my PC, they open the documents off the server where everything is stored. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... If the users have free rein to do what they want on this PC, there is nothing you can do about their mistakes. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org ab wrote: Unfortunately, not in this case! Any other ideas on the original question, please? "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Rocking the boat was always one of the most enjoyable things about working -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: If only it were that easy! They won't do that. All the letters are on the server and nothing will stop them using Save As... It would be better if they would just change the reference but "it has always been done like this" - i.e. when they have had previous typists. I'm only an employee and don't want to rock the boat. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... The first thing to do is to stop your colleagues using old letters as a basis for new ones and create proper templates. http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm. which put their own reference details in the masthead automatically. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#15
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Is this possible...?
It's just so frustrating. Today, there were some letters for me to do the
labels (they can't do them!) and I found quite a few mistakes - not spellings or anything like that but just layouts, inconsistent spacing, etc. Even if I pointed these things out to them, they wouldn't think it important - that's not their line of business! Perhaps a future version of Word will address this problem - though I doubt it. Just as a matter of interest, does anyone else have this problem? "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... I think Graham was thinking of a password to modify, not password to open, but that wouldn't keep them from using Save As, so we're back where we started. -- 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. "josi" wrote in message ... I would love to do that, Graham. I totally agree they need training but until they see the need, I'll have to put up with it! More than my jobs worth to password protect my documents. I only work part time and they often have to open my documents, which are left on the server, so that's not an option anyway. I have been looking into other suggestions about a macro but I am not sure that would achieve what I'm looking for - even if I understood how to set it up. I'll keep trying. Thanks for your help. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... If they are opening your documents then whatever they contain (hidden or otherwise) will still be in those documents. I suppose you could insert your initials formatted as hidden within a paragraph that will be deleted, but I wouldn't rely on it. What this organisation of yours needs *badly* is some training. I suppose it will happen when one of these users deletes a valuable document. You could certainly deter them by providing a template for their new letters and password protecting your documents so they can't open them. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org ab wrote: But is there any way I can have a 'hidden' indication of the documents I have typed? By the way, they don't use my PC, they open the documents off the server where everything is stored. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... If the users have free rein to do what they want on this PC, there is nothing you can do about their mistakes. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org ab wrote: Unfortunately, not in this case! Any other ideas on the original question, please? "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Rocking the boat was always one of the most enjoyable things about working -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: If only it were that easy! They won't do that. All the letters are on the server and nothing will stop them using Save As... It would be better if they would just change the reference but "it has always been done like this" - i.e. when they have had previous typists. I'm only an employee and don't want to rock the boat. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... The first thing to do is to stop your colleagues using old letters as a basis for new ones and create proper templates. http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm. which put their own reference details in the masthead automatically. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org josi wrote: This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#16
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Is this possible...?
You might use an inserted field. For example, place thge cursor at an
appropriate place, navigate to insert fiels and selece user initial from the list. If whomever subs for you is in the habit of opening an old file and modifying it, there are situatiopns in which the field will not update. However, given that that person is not using your computer, there is a good change the initials will change to those recorded in User Information in the Word of the machine being used. Tom MSMVP Windows Shell/User "josi" wrote in message ... This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#17
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Is this possible...?
Will try that! Thanks
"Tom Ferguson" wrote in message ... You might use an inserted field. For example, place thge cursor at an appropriate place, navigate to insert fiels and selece user initial from the list. If whomever subs for you is in the habit of opening an old file and modifying it, there are situatiopns in which the field will not update. However, given that that person is not using your computer, there is a good change the initials will change to those recorded in User Information in the Word of the machine being used. Tom MSMVP Windows Shell/User "josi" wrote in message ... This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#18
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Is this possible...?
Have tried this at home. I thought it was working but having sent the doc to
my husband's PC and done a Save As (as would be done at the office, the initials did not automatically update. Of course, I could update manually but the others in the office would not do that! I don't suppose a macro could be written to automatically update the initials, either when the document is open or saved/printed? "ab" wrote in message ... Will try that! Thanks "Tom Ferguson" wrote in message ... You might use an inserted field. For example, place thge cursor at an appropriate place, navigate to insert fiels and selece user initial from the list. If whomever subs for you is in the habit of opening an old file and modifying it, there are situatiopns in which the field will not update. However, given that that person is not using your computer, there is a good change the initials will change to those recorded in User Information in the Word of the machine being used. Tom MSMVP Windows Shell/User "josi" wrote in message ... This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#19
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Is this possible...?
Undoubtedly a macro could do this. The problem with a macro, though, is that
your other users will get a macro prompt and may elect to disable macros. -- 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. "josi" wrote in message ... Have tried this at home. I thought it was working but having sent the doc to my husband's PC and done a Save As (as would be done at the office, the initials did not automatically update. Of course, I could update manually but the others in the office would not do that! I don't suppose a macro could be written to automatically update the initials, either when the document is open or saved/printed? "ab" wrote in message ... Will try that! Thanks "Tom Ferguson" wrote in message ... You might use an inserted field. For example, place thge cursor at an appropriate place, navigate to insert fiels and selece user initial from the list. If whomever subs for you is in the habit of opening an old file and modifying it, there are situatiopns in which the field will not update. However, given that that person is not using your computer, there is a good change the initials will change to those recorded in User Information in the Word of the machine being used. Tom MSMVP Windows Shell/User "josi" wrote in message ... This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#20
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Is this possible...?
The faint hope is that the other person will print the document and has the
print-time option set that updates field codes. Tom MSMVP Windows Shell/User "josi" wrote in message ... Have tried this at home. I thought it was working but having sent the doc to my husband's PC and done a Save As (as would be done at the office, the initials did not automatically update. Of course, I could update manually but the others in the office would not do that! I don't suppose a macro could be written to automatically update the initials, either when the document is open or saved/printed? "ab" wrote in message ... Will try that! Thanks "Tom Ferguson" wrote in message ... You might use an inserted field. For example, place thge cursor at an appropriate place, navigate to insert fiels and selece user initial from the list. If whomever subs for you is in the habit of opening an old file and modifying it, there are situatiopns in which the field will not update. However, given that that person is not using your computer, there is a good change the initials will change to those recorded in User Information in the Word of the machine being used. Tom MSMVP Windows Shell/User "josi" wrote in message ... This may seem a very strange question but is something I have been thinking about for a while. This is the situation: I work in an office as the only typist for several people. At the top of letters is a reference made up of the initials, in upper case, of the person who has dictated (or handwritten) the letter followed by an oblique stroke and my initials (in lower case letters). So far, so good. However, if I am absent for any reason, the people type their own letters by using a previous document and Save As..., or even type a letter from scratch. They always use the same reference at the top of the letter (i.e. including my initials). Apart from an element of pride (I confess!) as they aren't very accurate typists, this can lead to confusion when at some future date, they query something which I have supposedly typed. What I would love to do is to find some way of unobtrusively indicating in a document when I have actually typed it. I have thought of entering somethng in the document properties but that wouldn't work when they use Save As... Any ideas, please? |
#21
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Is this possible...?
Completely understand your situation - and of course "it wasn't them" either.
I am assuming others are picking up the documents from the server. Does each user have their own details filled in in user information? Tools, Options, User Information? If they are the user will likely to be set to "their name". If that is the case, when you open a saved document, File, New and have your view set to properties view, then it shows you , Title, Author, keywords, comments, template and ....... Saved By. It also shows other things like when the document was created and any other custom properties up might have set in your document. So, even if no one else has their "User Information" set, at least if you do, if someone changes your document or "Save's As" the document properties will reflect this. Also, if you fill in the "initials" part as well then you can insert your inititals as a field in your document/template Insert, Field, User information and if someone else saves - their initials. Hope it helps. |
#22
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Is this possible...?
Thanks for your reply. I have been experimenting: I have found that if I
base a new document on my template, the initials don't update on other users' computers because I had protected the first section (which includes Ref and Date) for "Forms". What I was trying to get at the top of the letter was the reference, e.g: JobNo./INITIALS(DICTATED BY)/myinitials(typist) If I just use a field for my initials, it works fine - i.e. without formatting for forms. Will keep trying! "jujuwillis" wrote in message ... Completely understand your situation - and of course "it wasn't them" either. I am assuming others are picking up the documents from the server. Does each user have their own details filled in in user information? Tools, Options, User Information? If they are the user will likely to be set to "their name". If that is the case, when you open a saved document, File, New and have your view set to properties view, then it shows you , Title, Author, keywords, comments, template and ....... Saved By. It also shows other things like when the document was created and any other custom properties up might have set in your document. So, even if no one else has their "User Information" set, at least if you do, if someone changes your document or "Save's As" the document properties will reflect this. Also, if you fill in the "initials" part as well then you can insert your inititals as a field in your document/template Insert, Field, User information and if someone else saves - their initials. Hope it helps. |
#23
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Is this possible...?
Protecting any portion of a document for forms, however, will make many Word
features unavailable in the entire document. -- 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. "ab" wrote in message ... Thanks for your reply. I have been experimenting: I have found that if I base a new document on my template, the initials don't update on other users' computers because I had protected the first section (which includes Ref and Date) for "Forms". What I was trying to get at the top of the letter was the reference, e.g: JobNo./INITIALS(DICTATED BY)/myinitials(typist) If I just use a field for my initials, it works fine - i.e. without formatting for forms. Will keep trying! "jujuwillis" wrote in message ... Completely understand your situation - and of course "it wasn't them" either. I am assuming others are picking up the documents from the server. Does each user have their own details filled in in user information? Tools, Options, User Information? If they are the user will likely to be set to "their name". If that is the case, when you open a saved document, File, New and have your view set to properties view, then it shows you , Title, Author, keywords, comments, template and ....... Saved By. It also shows other things like when the document was created and any other custom properties up might have set in your document. So, even if no one else has their "User Information" set, at least if you do, if someone changes your document or "Save's As" the document properties will reflect this. Also, if you fill in the "initials" part as well then you can insert your inititals as a field in your document/template Insert, Field, User information and if someone else saves - their initials. Hope it helps. |
#24
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Is this possible...?
I think I am going to have to settle for just a field for my initials - at
least then that will be updated if anyone does a Save As. I can't work out any way of including JobNo./INITIALS(DICTATED BY)/myinitials(typist) without protecting it for Forms. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Protecting any portion of a document for forms, however, will make many Word features unavailable in the entire document. -- 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. "ab" wrote in message ... Thanks for your reply. I have been experimenting: I have found that if I base a new document on my template, the initials don't update on other users' computers because I had protected the first section (which includes Ref and Date) for "Forms". What I was trying to get at the top of the letter was the reference, e.g: JobNo./INITIALS(DICTATED BY)/myinitials(typist) If I just use a field for my initials, it works fine - i.e. without formatting for forms. Will keep trying! "jujuwillis" wrote in message ... Completely understand your situation - and of course "it wasn't them" either. I am assuming others are picking up the documents from the server. Does each user have their own details filled in in user information? Tools, Options, User Information? If they are the user will likely to be set to "their name". If that is the case, when you open a saved document, File, New and have your view set to properties view, then it shows you , Title, Author, keywords, comments, template and ....... Saved By. It also shows other things like when the document was created and any other custom properties up might have set in your document. So, even if no one else has their "User Information" set, at least if you do, if someone changes your document or "Save's As" the document properties will reflect this. Also, if you fill in the "initials" part as well then you can insert your inititals as a field in your document/template Insert, Field, User information and if someone else saves - their initials. Hope it helps. |