Thanks. This should do the trick!
"Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote:
You could modify the macro in the article "Find & ReplaceAll on a batch of
documents in the same folder€¯ at:
http://www.word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/BatchFR.htm
by deleting all of the stuff about finding and replacing so that it just
opened each document and incorporating the following example from the Visual
Basic Help file so that it saved each document as a text file
Sub SaveAsTextFile()
Dim strDocName As String
Dim intPos As Integer
'Find position of extension in file name
strDocName = ActiveDocument.Name
intPos = InStrRev(strDocName, ".")
If intPos = 0 Then
'If the document has not yet been saved
'Ask the user to provide a file name
strDocName = InputBox("Please enter the name " & _
"of your document.")
Else
'Strip off extension and add ".txt" extension
strDocName = Left(strDocName, intPos - 1)
strDocName = strDocName & ".txt"
End If
'Save file with new extension
ActiveDocument.SaveAs FileName:=strDocName, _
FileFormat:=wdFormatText
End Sub
--
Hope this helps.
Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my
services on a paid consulting basis.
Doug Robbins - Word MVP, originally posted via msnews.microsoft.com
"Jack Burman" wrote in message
...
Would like to strip formatting from large group of small files and save as
text files.
Can a Word 2003 macro be created that will take a folder of small .docs
and
save all .docs as .txt files. If so, how can this be done? If not, is
there
some other method that can be used to automate this task.
Ultimately, would like to concatenate all .txt files into one large file
and
use in another program - not word processing program.
Thanks