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#1
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Hello Everyone,
Using word 2000. I am working on a project and each line can't have more than 60 characters including spaces (a space is = to a character). I can see the number of characters in my status bar because I am using a table and it appears that the Col number is equal to characters. I have added a column at the end of my table and am manually entering the number of characters. Is there a way to insert a function/formula into this last column to auto insert the final character count? Thanks, Linda |
#2
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Hi Lmb,
Using word 2000. I am working on a project and each line can't have more than 60 characters including spaces (a space is = to a character). I can see the number of characters in my status bar because I am using a table and it appears that the Col number is equal to characters. I have added a column at the end of my table and am manually entering the number of characters. Is there a way to insert a function/formula into this last column to auto insert the final character count? You'd need a macro to pick up the number of characters. Depending on how you're working, you could, possibly, use an EVENT to force the macro to execute (like moving from one table cell to another). How "simple" the macro would be, other than that, would depend on whether there would be only one line of text / table cell... Or, use a proportional font (such as Courier New) so that the table / page width controls the number of characters. That would be a lot simpler. Once the document is finished, if it needs to be "pretty" you could then apply a porportional font. Cindy Meister INTER-Solutions, Switzerland http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindymeister (last update Jun 8 2004) http://www.word.mvps.org This reply is posted in the Newsgroup; please post any follow question or reply in the newsgroup and not by e-mail :-) |
#3
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![]() "Cindy M -WordMVP-" wrote in message news:VA.0000b388.00594053@speedy... Hi Lmb, Using word 2000. I am working on a project and each line can't have more than 60 characters including spaces (a space is = to a character). I can see the number of characters in my status bar because I am using a table and it appears that the Col number is equal to characters. I have added a column at the end of my table and am manually entering the number of characters. Is there a way to insert a function/formula into this last column to auto insert the final character count? You'd need a macro to pick up the number of characters. Depending on how you're working, you could, possibly, use an EVENT to force the macro to execute (like moving from one table cell to another). How "simple" the macro would be, other than that, would depend on whether there would be only one line of text / table cell... Or, use a proportional font (such as Courier New) so that the table / page width controls the number of characters. That would be a lot simpler. Once the document is finished, if it needs to be "pretty" you could then apply a porportional font. Cindy Meister INTER-Solutions, Switzerland http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindymeister (last update Jun 8 2004) http://www.word.mvps.org This reply is posted in the Newsgroup; please post any follow question or reply in the newsgroup and not by e-mail :-) Cindy, Thanks, I have never heard of proportional fonts, I did that and it works great. No need for this to be pretty, when I get the wording down to 60 characters the programmers will build the form. Linda |
#4
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When Cindy wrote "a proportional font (such as Courier New)," she meant to
say "a monospaced font." Times New Roman, Arial, and most other fonts you use in Word are proportional; that is, the letters are of variable width as needed (an m is wider than an i, for example). A monospaced font is like the type on most typewriters; every character is the same width. -- 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. "LMB" wrote in message ... "Cindy M -WordMVP-" wrote in message news:VA.0000b388.00594053@speedy... Hi Lmb, Using word 2000. I am working on a project and each line can't have more than 60 characters including spaces (a space is = to a character). I can see the number of characters in my status bar because I am using a table and it appears that the Col number is equal to characters. I have added a column at the end of my table and am manually entering the number of characters. Is there a way to insert a function/formula into this last column to auto insert the final character count? You'd need a macro to pick up the number of characters. Depending on how you're working, you could, possibly, use an EVENT to force the macro to execute (like moving from one table cell to another). How "simple" the macro would be, other than that, would depend on whether there would be only one line of text / table cell... Or, use a proportional font (such as Courier New) so that the table / page width controls the number of characters. That would be a lot simpler. Once the document is finished, if it needs to be "pretty" you could then apply a porportional font. Cindy Meister INTER-Solutions, Switzerland http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindymeister (last update Jun 8 2004) http://www.word.mvps.org This reply is posted in the Newsgroup; please post any follow question or reply in the newsgroup and not by e-mail :-) Cindy, Thanks, I have never heard of proportional fonts, I did that and it works great. No need for this to be pretty, when I get the wording down to 60 characters the programmers will build the form. Linda |
#5
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Hi Suzanne,
When Cindy wrote "a proportional font (such as Courier New)," she meant to say "a monospaced font." Times New Roman, Arial, and most other fonts you use in Word are proportional; that is, the letters are of variable width as needed (an m is wider than an i, for example). A monospaced font is like the type on most typewriters; every character is the same width. Yeah, I meant to write non-proportional. My apologies to everyone reading this thread for mixing that up! Cindy Meister |
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