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Method 1: put it in a textbox that is anchored to the page heading (not the
header) -- that way it is still part of the body of the page, and thus independent of other pages, but will not interfere with the layout of the page. You could position the textbox so that it appears to be part of the footer. Method 2: add it as hidden text to the body of the page, then use a styleref field in the footer. Method 3: don't bother. Numerous research projects have shown that page-level document control is a waste of time. It may gratify your anal-obsessive internal auditors, but it does nothing whatever for safety, security, or risk management. "Jacob" wrote in message ... In my job's manual, we have a revision date at teh bottom. Typically it is typed in the main text which causes problems. Is there a way to insert an element, or text, in the footer without affecting the other pages in that section? Right now if i insert text, it will affect all the documents in that section. The only solution i can think of is to separate each page into a different section. The only problem is that each page in teh manual is a different guideline taht has to be revised from time to time and this could be tedious and time consuming. Any ideas? |
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