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#1
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what is a linked style?
At the bottom of the Styles task pane in Microsoft Word 2007 is a check box
labeled "Disabled Linked Styles." Can someone please provide me with an explanation of a linked style? I understand it has something to do with the combination of paragraph and character styles, but nowhere in Microsoft can I find a succinct definition of a linked style and why I'd want to disable them. Please help -- urgent! -- cmc |
#2
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
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what is a linked style?
"cmc" wrote:
At the bottom of the Styles task pane in Microsoft Word 2007 is a check box labeled "Disabled Linked Styles." Can someone please provide me with an explanation of a linked style? I understand it has something to do with the combination of paragraph and character styles, but nowhere in Microsoft can I find a succinct definition of a linked style and why I'd want to disable them. Please help -- urgent! Hi cmc, As I heard the story, some people did not understand why they could not apply some paragraph style to just part of a paragraph. So Microsoft added that "feature" in Word 2002. I'd *strongly* recommend to check the option to "Disable Linked Styles". If you apply a paragraph style to only part of a paragraph in Word 2002/2003, or 2007 with linked styles enabled, it will create a character style behind the scenes... one of the "Char" styles you may have heard about, or probably already have seen. That character style has the same font formatting as the paragraph style it's based on. Usually, the character style and the "Char" extension to its name is not shown. It does often show after the document was edited in an older version, or if the link between the paragraph style and the character style was broken. The styles pane will usually only show you one style... In Word 2002/2003 it will look as if it's a simple paragraph style (when in fact it isn't), in Word 2007 it will show as a linked style (with both the ¶ and the ª showing to the right of the style). Depending on your selection, Word will apply either the character style or the paragraph style. Unfortunately, there are lots of issues with that, and there were hosts of bugs on top of that. One bug led to "Char Char" styles, that were in fact paragraph styles, "Char Char Char" character styles, and so on. There were design issues. For example, the varying support of the new feature in the different versions led to all kinds of problems when you exchange documents. The font formatting in the paragraph style also in some cases could be different than that in the linked character style. Another design issue: The Char styles are named differently in the different language version, so if you exchange docs between them, you could end up with a Char style (US/UK), Car styles (Portuguese), Zchn (German) ... And if Word happens to hide those extensions, you can get a real mess. Just the other day I got a document I couldn't properly format, until I discovered that the "Normal" style was a pure character style (strangely without any Char extension), and was not linked to the corresponding paragraph style ("Standard" in my German version), as it should probably have been. The most important issue IMO: You have a very hard time to tell which style is applied, and to keep your document cleanly formatted. If the styles pane tells you it's "Body Text", it could really be "Body Text" paragraph style, or any paragraph style with "Body Text" applied on top as a character style. In Word2007, you can in principle determine both the character style and the paragraph style applied through the new "Style Inspector", but that's really a lot of hassle to use, and impractical. So I would never, ever dream of using linked styles on purpose, and instead use paragraph styles and character styles as I need them. Unfortunately, lots of built-in styles have become linked styles by default in Word2007, so you can no longer avoid them altogether (as you still could i Word 2002/2003). Regards, Klaus |
#3
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
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what is a linked style?
Klaus Linke wrote: "cmc" wrote: At the bottom of the Styles task pane in Microsoft Word 2007 is a check box labeled "Disabled Linked Styles." Can someone please provide me with an explanation of a linked style? I understand it has something to do with the combination of paragraph and character styles, but nowhere in Microsoft can I find a succinct definition of a linked style and why I'd want to disable them. Please help -- urgent! Hi cmc, As I heard the story, some people did not understand why they could not apply some paragraph style to just part of a paragraph. So Microsoft added that "feature" in Word 2002. I'd *strongly* recommend to check the option to "Disable Linked Styles". If you apply a paragraph style to only part of a paragraph in Word 2002/2003, or 2007 with linked styles enabled, it will create a character style behind the scenes... one of the "Char" styles you may have heard about, or probably already have seen. That character style has the same font formatting as the paragraph style it's based on. Usually, the character style and the "Char" extension to its name is not shown. It does often show after the document was edited in an older version, or if the link between the paragraph style and the character style was broken. The styles pane will usually only show you one style... In Word 2002/2003 it will look as if it's a simple paragraph style (when in fact it isn't), in Word 2007 it will show as a linked style (with both the ¶ and the ª showing to the right of the style). Depending on your selection, Word will apply either the character style or the paragraph style. Unfortunately, there are lots of issues with that, and there were hosts of bugs on top of that. One bug led to "Char Char" styles, that were in fact paragraph styles, "Char Char Char" character styles, and so on. There were design issues. For example, the varying support of the new feature in the different versions led to all kinds of problems when you exchange documents. The font formatting in the paragraph style also in some cases could be different than that in the linked character style. Another design issue: The Char styles are named differently in the different language version, so if you exchange docs between them, you could end up with a Char style (US/UK), Car styles (Portuguese), Zchn (German) ... And if Word happens to hide those extensions, you can get a real mess. Just the other day I got a document I couldn't properly format, until I discovered that the "Normal" style was a pure character style (strangely without any Char extension), and was not linked to the corresponding paragraph style ("Standard" in my German version), as it should probably have been. The most important issue IMO: You have a very hard time to tell which style is applied, and to keep your document cleanly formatted. If the styles pane tells you it's "Body Text", it could really be "Body Text" paragraph style, or any paragraph style with "Body Text" applied on top as a character style. In Word2007, you can in principle determine both the character style and the paragraph style applied through the new "Style Inspector", but that's really a lot of hassle to use, and impractical. So I would never, ever dream of using linked styles on purpose, and instead use paragraph styles and character styles as I need them. Unfortunately, lots of built-in styles have become linked styles by default in Word2007, so you can no longer avoid them altogether (as you still could i Word 2002/2003). Regards, Klaus |
#4
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
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what is a linked style?
My problem with the "Char Char Char Char" style is that it is coming in
when we insert autotext. The autotext has been formatted using the Normal style, but when we insert the autotext, it uses the Char Char Char Char style. We delete the style, but it is still there. How can I get rid of this style forever? I think it should be called the "Jason Style" after the Jason tab that used to be in Word several versions back because just like Jason in the Friday the 13th movies, it never goes away!!! Klaus Linke wrote: "cmc" wrote: At the bottom of the Styles task pane in Microsoft Word 2007 is a check box labeled "Disabled Linked Styles." Can someone please provide me with an explanation of a linked style? I understand it has something to do with the combination of paragraph and character styles, but nowhere in Microsoft can I find a succinct definition of a linked style and why I'd want to disable them. Please help -- urgent! Hi cmc, As I heard the story, some people did not understand why they could not apply some paragraph style to just part of a paragraph. So Microsoft added that "feature" in Word 2002. I'd *strongly* recommend to check the option to "Disable Linked Styles". If you apply a paragraph style to only part of a paragraph in Word 2002/2003, or 2007 with linked styles enabled, it will create a character style behind the scenes... one of the "Char" styles you may have heard about, or probably already have seen. That character style has the same font formatting as the paragraph style it's based on. Usually, the character style and the "Char" extension to its name is not shown. It does often show after the document was edited in an older version, or if the link between the paragraph style and the character style was broken. The styles pane will usually only show you one style... In Word 2002/2003 it will look as if it's a simple paragraph style (when in fact it isn't), in Word 2007 it will show as a linked style (with both the ¶ and the ª showing to the right of the style). Depending on your selection, Word will apply either the character style or the paragraph style. Unfortunately, there are lots of issues with that, and there were hosts of bugs on top of that. One bug led to "Char Char" styles, that were in fact paragraph styles, "Char Char Char" character styles, and so on. There were design issues. For example, the varying support of the new feature in the different versions led to all kinds of problems when you exchange documents. The font formatting in the paragraph style also in some cases could be different than that in the linked character style. Another design issue: The Char styles are named differently in the different language version, so if you exchange docs between them, you could end up with a Char style (US/UK), Car styles (Portuguese), Zchn (German) ... And if Word happens to hide those extensions, you can get a real mess. Just the other day I got a document I couldn't properly format, until I discovered that the "Normal" style was a pure character style (strangely without any Char extension), and was not linked to the corresponding paragraph style ("Standard" in my German version), as it should probably have been. The most important issue IMO: You have a very hard time to tell which style is applied, and to keep your document cleanly formatted. If the styles pane tells you it's "Body Text", it could really be "Body Text" paragraph style, or any paragraph style with "Body Text" applied on top as a character style. In Word2007, you can in principle determine both the character style and the paragraph style applied through the new "Style Inspector", but that's really a lot of hassle to use, and impractical. So I would never, ever dream of using linked styles on purpose, and instead use paragraph styles and character styles as I need them. Unfortunately, lots of built-in styles have become linked styles by default in Word2007, so you can no longer avoid them altogether (as you still could i Word 2002/2003). Regards, Klaus |
#5
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
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what is a linked style?
Hi,
"Char Char Char Char" would be a paragraph style. Probably that was what was really applied when you created the AutoText, but Word hid the Char extension from you. Maybe easiest to delete and recreate the problematic AutoText entries. If you still get the Char stuff, it might be best to recreate the template from scratch, though I haven't seen a case yet where this was necessary. But I don't use AutoText... there might be a better solution. I like the "Jason style" nomiker. It's complicated and bad design like this one which sometimes make me wonder if Word is still the right tool for me. Regards, Klaus wrote: My problem with the "Char Char Char Char" style is that it is coming in when we insert autotext. The autotext has been formatted using the Normal style, but when we insert the autotext, it uses the Char Char Char Char style. We delete the style, but it is still there. How can I get rid of this style forever? I think it should be called the "Jason Style" after the Jason tab that used to be in Word several versions back because just like Jason in the Friday the 13th movies, it never goes away!!! Klaus Linke wrote: "cmc" wrote: At the bottom of the Styles task pane in Microsoft Word 2007 is a check box labeled "Disabled Linked Styles." Can someone please provide me with an explanation of a linked style? I understand it has something to do with the combination of paragraph and character styles, but nowhere in Microsoft can I find a succinct definition of a linked style and why I'd want to disable them. Please help -- urgent! Hi cmc, As I heard the story, some people did not understand why they could not apply some paragraph style to just part of a paragraph. So Microsoft added that "feature" in Word 2002. I'd *strongly* recommend to check the option to "Disable Linked Styles". If you apply a paragraph style to only part of a paragraph in Word 2002/2003, or 2007 with linked styles enabled, it will create a character style behind the scenes... one of the "Char" styles you may have heard about, or probably already have seen. That character style has the same font formatting as the paragraph style it's based on. Usually, the character style and the "Char" extension to its name is not shown. It does often show after the document was edited in an older version, or if the link between the paragraph style and the character style was broken. The styles pane will usually only show you one style... In Word 2002/2003 it will look as if it's a simple paragraph style (when in fact it isn't), in Word 2007 it will show as a linked style (with both the ¶ and the ª showing to the right of the style). Depending on your selection, Word will apply either the character style or the paragraph style. Unfortunately, there are lots of issues with that, and there were hosts of bugs on top of that. One bug led to "Char Char" styles, that were in fact paragraph styles, "Char Char Char" character styles, and so on. There were design issues. For example, the varying support of the new feature in the different versions led to all kinds of problems when you exchange documents. The font formatting in the paragraph style also in some cases could be different than that in the linked character style. Another design issue: The Char styles are named differently in the different language version, so if you exchange docs between them, you could end up with a Char style (US/UK), Car styles (Portuguese), Zchn (German) ... And if Word happens to hide those extensions, you can get a real mess. Just the other day I got a document I couldn't properly format, until I discovered that the "Normal" style was a pure character style (strangely without any Char extension), and was not linked to the corresponding paragraph style ("Standard" in my German version), as it should probably have been. The most important issue IMO: You have a very hard time to tell which style is applied, and to keep your document cleanly formatted. If the styles pane tells you it's "Body Text", it could really be "Body Text" paragraph style, or any paragraph style with "Body Text" applied on top as a character style. In Word2007, you can in principle determine both the character style and the paragraph style applied through the new "Style Inspector", but that's really a lot of hassle to use, and impractical. So I would never, ever dream of using linked styles on purpose, and instead use paragraph styles and character styles as I need them. Unfortunately, lots of built-in styles have become linked styles by default in Word2007, so you can no longer avoid them altogether (as you still could i Word 2002/2003). Regards, Klaus |
#6
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
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what is a linked style?
I forgot:
The style is probably " Char Char Char Char"? Those Char styles with a leading blank can't be deleted from a document or template, as far as I am aware. At least not easily... maybe by saving as RTF or XML and hand-editing that as text. Regards, Klaus |
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