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#1
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What's that little gray bracket?
In word, in several places, I see gray brackets - [ and ]. They look just
like standard 12 point square brackets in the text, except they are light gray, like a header or footer, but they are not part of a header or footer. I have no idea where the came from. I don't seem able to delete them - they move with paragraph marks. I did delete one or more once (to my surprise), but all I did was hit the delete key, that doesn't work now. I assume those must signify something. Can anyone tell me what? Thanks, Colin |
#2
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Hi Colin,
They're bookmarks. Also, if there's no text at all between the ends of the bookmark, the brackets overlap and look like a gray capital I. If you don't want to see the brackets, go to Tools Options View and uncheck the Bookmarks option. It's a good idea to display them while you're editing if you don't want to overwrite or delete your bookmarks accidentally. The you can turn them off for reading. They never print. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Colin Higbie wrote: In word, in several places, I see gray brackets - [ and ]. They look just like standard 12 point square brackets in the text, except they are light gray, like a header or footer, but they are not part of a header or footer. I have no idea where the came from. I don't seem able to delete them - they move with paragraph marks. I did delete one or more once (to my surprise), but all I did was hit the delete key, that doesn't work now. I assume those must signify something. Can anyone tell me what? Thanks, Colin |
#3
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Wow, I'm actually even more confused now. You are right - if I uncheck
Bookmarks in View Options, they go away. But I don't understand why they are there in the first place. This is a large document (about 250 pages so far) and it has a TOC. But other than any automatic bookmarking it's done for the TOC (does it do that for the hyperlinks in the TOC?) I have not inserted any bookmarks. Stranger than that, they don't seem to line up with any particular styles or section breaks, though they always appear at style changes. That is, sometimes an opening bracket might appear before, say, Heading 4, and the closing bracket, before a Heading 3, but most times they are not before those headings. None seem to appear in the middle of a paragraph or between paragraphs of the same style. I do use many Cross References in the document, but those always point to Captions or Chapter Headings (never to a heading 3 or 4). How did those bookmarks get there? Do I need them if I'm not knowingly using bookmarks? I swear I've sometimes seen them appear in print too (at least the one that appears at the very beginning, on the title page, before any other text). By the way, I wrote the entire doc from scratch and no one else has edited it. I've tried hard to stick to using styles and proper procedures for formatting to keep it clean. Did I make a mistake? Thanks, Colin "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Hi Colin, They're bookmarks. Also, if there's no text at all between the ends of the bookmark, the brackets overlap and look like a gray capital I. If you don't want to see the brackets, go to Tools Options View and uncheck the Bookmarks option. It's a good idea to display them while you're editing if you don't want to overwrite or delete your bookmarks accidentally. The you can turn them off for reading. They never print. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Colin Higbie wrote: In word, in several places, I see gray brackets - [ and ]. They look just like standard 12 point square brackets in the text, except they are light gray, like a header or footer, but they are not part of a header or footer. I have no idea where the came from. I don't seem able to delete them - they move with paragraph marks. I did delete one or more once (to my surprise), but all I did was hit the delete key, that doesn't work now. I assume those must signify something. Can anyone tell me what? Thanks, Colin |
#4
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Bookmarks created by the TOC and cross-references are usually invisible; you
won't even see them in the Insert | Bookmark dialog unless you check the box for "Hidden bookmarks." So go to Insert | Bookmark and clear that check box and see what's listed. You can then use Go To (Ctrl+G) to go to a specific bookmark to see where it's located. My guess is that if you haven't inserted them intentionally, it won't hurt to remove them (which you can do through the Insert | Bookmark dialog). -- 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. "Colin Higbie" wrote in message ... Wow, I'm actually even more confused now. You are right - if I uncheck Bookmarks in View Options, they go away. But I don't understand why they are there in the first place. This is a large document (about 250 pages so far) and it has a TOC. But other than any automatic bookmarking it's done for the TOC (does it do that for the hyperlinks in the TOC?) I have not inserted any bookmarks. Stranger than that, they don't seem to line up with any particular styles or section breaks, though they always appear at style changes. That is, sometimes an opening bracket might appear before, say, Heading 4, and the closing bracket, before a Heading 3, but most times they are not before those headings. None seem to appear in the middle of a paragraph or between paragraphs of the same style. I do use many Cross References in the document, but those always point to Captions or Chapter Headings (never to a heading 3 or 4). How did those bookmarks get there? Do I need them if I'm not knowingly using bookmarks? I swear I've sometimes seen them appear in print too (at least the one that appears at the very beginning, on the title page, before any other text). By the way, I wrote the entire doc from scratch and no one else has edited it. I've tried hard to stick to using styles and proper procedures for formatting to keep it clean. Did I make a mistake? Thanks, Colin "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Hi Colin, They're bookmarks. Also, if there's no text at all between the ends of the bookmark, the brackets overlap and look like a gray capital I. If you don't want to see the brackets, go to Tools Options View and uncheck the Bookmarks option. It's a good idea to display them while you're editing if you don't want to overwrite or delete your bookmarks accidentally. The you can turn them off for reading. They never print. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Colin Higbie wrote: In word, in several places, I see gray brackets - [ and ]. They look just like standard 12 point square brackets in the text, except they are light gray, like a header or footer, but they are not part of a header or footer. I have no idea where the came from. I don't seem able to delete them - they move with paragraph marks. I did delete one or more once (to my surprise), but all I did was hit the delete key, that doesn't work now. I assume those must signify something. Can anyone tell me what? Thanks, Colin |
#5
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Thanks, that seems to have worked. Any idea what happened?
There were 7 of them. Each had a name like OLE_LINK1, OLE_LINK2, etc. Where did they come from? Also, why does a bookmark have an open and a close bracket - isn't a bookmark a point, not a begin and an end? Thanks again, Colin "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Bookmarks created by the TOC and cross-references are usually invisible; you won't even see them in the Insert | Bookmark dialog unless you check the box for "Hidden bookmarks." So go to Insert | Bookmark and clear that check box and see what's listed. You can then use Go To (Ctrl+G) to go to a specific bookmark to see where it's located. My guess is that if you haven't inserted them intentionally, it won't hurt to remove them (which you can do through the Insert | Bookmark dialog). -- 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. "Colin Higbie" wrote in message ... Wow, I'm actually even more confused now. You are right - if I uncheck Bookmarks in View Options, they go away. But I don't understand why they are there in the first place. This is a large document (about 250 pages so far) and it has a TOC. But other than any automatic bookmarking it's done for the TOC (does it do that for the hyperlinks in the TOC?) I have not inserted any bookmarks. Stranger than that, they don't seem to line up with any particular styles or section breaks, though they always appear at style changes. That is, sometimes an opening bracket might appear before, say, Heading 4, and the closing bracket, before a Heading 3, but most times they are not before those headings. None seem to appear in the middle of a paragraph or between paragraphs of the same style. I do use many Cross References in the document, but those always point to Captions or Chapter Headings (never to a heading 3 or 4). How did those bookmarks get there? Do I need them if I'm not knowingly using bookmarks? I swear I've sometimes seen them appear in print too (at least the one that appears at the very beginning, on the title page, before any other text). By the way, I wrote the entire doc from scratch and no one else has edited it. I've tried hard to stick to using styles and proper procedures for formatting to keep it clean. Did I make a mistake? Thanks, Colin "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Hi Colin, They're bookmarks. Also, if there's no text at all between the ends of the bookmark, the brackets overlap and look like a gray capital I. If you don't want to see the brackets, go to Tools Options View and uncheck the Bookmarks option. It's a good idea to display them while you're editing if you don't want to overwrite or delete your bookmarks accidentally. The you can turn them off for reading. They never print. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Colin Higbie wrote: In word, in several places, I see gray brackets - [ and ]. They look just like standard 12 point square brackets in the text, except they are light gray, like a header or footer, but they are not part of a header or footer. I have no idea where the came from. I don't seem able to delete them - they move with paragraph marks. I did delete one or more once (to my surprise), but all I did was hit the delete key, that doesn't work now. I assume those must signify something. Can anyone tell me what? Thanks, Colin |
#6
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As Jay pointed out, a bookmark can be a point, in which case it looks
like ][, but a bookmark can also enclose text. This allows you to replicate the contents of the bookmark elsewhere (that's basically the way TOCs and cross-references work). I'm not sure what would generate these OLE_LINK bookmarks, but it would appear that parts of your file might have been used by some other document or app. I find one reference in the KB to an "OLE Link Field" in Word, suggesting that it is created by linking an object such as an Excel spreadsheet, but this doesn't explain how a field would have become reduced to a bookmark. -- 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. "Colin Higbie" wrote in message ... Thanks, that seems to have worked. Any idea what happened? There were 7 of them. Each had a name like OLE_LINK1, OLE_LINK2, etc. Where did they come from? Also, why does a bookmark have an open and a close bracket - isn't a bookmark a point, not a begin and an end? Thanks again, Colin "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Bookmarks created by the TOC and cross-references are usually invisible; you won't even see them in the Insert | Bookmark dialog unless you check the box for "Hidden bookmarks." So go to Insert | Bookmark and clear that check box and see what's listed. You can then use Go To (Ctrl+G) to go to a specific bookmark to see where it's located. My guess is that if you haven't inserted them intentionally, it won't hurt to remove them (which you can do through the Insert | Bookmark dialog). -- 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. "Colin Higbie" wrote in message ... Wow, I'm actually even more confused now. You are right - if I uncheck Bookmarks in View Options, they go away. But I don't understand why they are there in the first place. This is a large document (about 250 pages so far) and it has a TOC. But other than any automatic bookmarking it's done for the TOC (does it do that for the hyperlinks in the TOC?) I have not inserted any bookmarks. Stranger than that, they don't seem to line up with any particular styles or section breaks, though they always appear at style changes. That is, sometimes an opening bracket might appear before, say, Heading 4, and the closing bracket, before a Heading 3, but most times they are not before those headings. None seem to appear in the middle of a paragraph or between paragraphs of the same style. I do use many Cross References in the document, but those always point to Captions or Chapter Headings (never to a heading 3 or 4). How did those bookmarks get there? Do I need them if I'm not knowingly using bookmarks? I swear I've sometimes seen them appear in print too (at least the one that appears at the very beginning, on the title page, before any other text). By the way, I wrote the entire doc from scratch and no one else has edited it. I've tried hard to stick to using styles and proper procedures for formatting to keep it clean. Did I make a mistake? Thanks, Colin "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Hi Colin, They're bookmarks. Also, if there's no text at all between the ends of the bookmark, the brackets overlap and look like a gray capital I. If you don't want to see the brackets, go to Tools Options View and uncheck the Bookmarks option. It's a good idea to display them while you're editing if you don't want to overwrite or delete your bookmarks accidentally. The you can turn them off for reading. They never print. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Colin Higbie wrote: In word, in several places, I see gray brackets - [ and ]. They look just like standard 12 point square brackets in the text, except they are light gray, like a header or footer, but they are not part of a header or footer. I have no idea where the came from. I don't seem able to delete them - they move with paragraph marks. I did delete one or more once (to my surprise), but all I did was hit the delete key, that doesn't work now. I assume those must signify something. Can anyone tell me what? Thanks, Colin |
#7
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Some people have reported that Word 2003 tends to spontaneously generate OLE
Links, maybe on cutting and pasting? (I've seen the same in MacWord 2004, but it doesn't seem to affect everyone to the same degree) There have been a couple reports on these groups. On 4/19/05 8:25 PM, "Colin Higbie" wrote: Thanks, that seems to have worked. Any idea what happened? There were 7 of them. Each had a name like OLE_LINK1, OLE_LINK2, etc. Where did they come from? |
#8
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This behavior is somewhat insonsistent. If I copy some text to an
already opened mail message, for instance, no bookmark is generated. However, if I copy text, then switch context to Outlook and create a new message, a new bookmark appears in Word even without pasting into the new mail message! One of the more aggravating conseqences of this is that Word will prompt to save changes when you don't think you have made any changes (the addition of the phantom bookmark is the change). Why is there no reference to this behavior in the Microsoft KB? |
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