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#1
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Hi
I want to make it so that my hyperlinks are that bright electric blue at all times in all states: hover, clicked, visited, I don't care. At the moment I have hyperlinks in my resume that have a mauve visited attribute and I don't want it. I assume it means a change in my css or similar. Anyone help please? Thanks Phil |
#2
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Soccerman58 wrote:
Hi I want to make it so that my hyperlinks are that bright electric blue at all times in all states: hover, clicked, visited, I don't care. At the moment I have hyperlinks in my resume that have a mauve visited attribute and I don't want it. I assume it means a change in my css or similar. Anyone help please? Thanks Phil In Format Styles, modify the FollowedHyperlink style. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
#3
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But Jay, that's only going to affect the hyperlink as it appears in
Word, right? Since the issue goes beyond Word, I've cross-posted this to the OE and the IE newsgroups. I have had many problems with this issue. Links may be the same color in Word (and I make links and followed links the same color in my Normal template), and they may be the same color in a web page, but then when I copy the web page text into an e-mail, some of them (the one's that haven't yet been clicked on in the Web page) are a different color that I don't want. Then I have to clean them up again. Or I will have links in Word that are a uniform color, but I then send the document to a website, and when it's posted online, some of the links are a different color. I have been unable to figure out the rules that govern this behavior or how to get control of it. Larry I wish there were some "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Soccerman58 wrote: Hi I want to make it so that my hyperlinks are that bright electric blue at all times in all states: hover, clicked, visited, I don't care. At the moment I have hyperlinks in my resume that have a mauve visited attribute and I don't want it. I assume it means a change in my css or similar. Anyone help please? Thanks Phil In Format Styles, modify the FollowedHyperlink style. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
#4
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As Jay says, though, it affects the display only on your screen. And many
users *prefer* to have followed hyperlinks a different color. I'd go crazy using Google if I couldn't see what pages/sites I'd already tried and rejected. -- 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. "Larry" wrote in message ... But Jay, that's only going to affect the hyperlink as it appears in Word, right? Since the issue goes beyond Word, I've cross-posted this to the OE and the IE newsgroups. I have had many problems with this issue. Links may be the same color in Word (and I make links and followed links the same color in my Normal template), and they may be the same color in a web page, but then when I copy the web page text into an e-mail, some of them (the one's that haven't yet been clicked on in the Web page) are a different color that I don't want. Then I have to clean them up again. Or I will have links in Word that are a uniform color, but I then send the document to a website, and when it's posted online, some of the links are a different color. I have been unable to figure out the rules that govern this behavior or how to get control of it. Larry I wish there were some "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Soccerman58 wrote: Hi I want to make it so that my hyperlinks are that bright electric blue at all times in all states: hover, clicked, visited, I don't care. At the moment I have hyperlinks in my resume that have a mauve visited attribute and I don't want it. I assume it means a change in my css or similar. Anyone help please? Thanks Phil In Format Styles, modify the FollowedHyperlink style. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
#5
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To clarify one step further, what governs the color you see (other than
possibly having a particular color specified in the HTML tag of the hyperlink, which is something Word doesn't do) is whether *you* have visited that page from *your* computer, which places those URLs in Internet Explorer's cache. Another user who views that web page and hasn't visited any of those links with his/her computer will not see different colors. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: As Jay says, though, it affects the display only on your screen. And many users *prefer* to have followed hyperlinks a different color. I'd go crazy using Google if I couldn't see what pages/sites I'd already tried and rejected. "Larry" wrote in message ... But Jay, that's only going to affect the hyperlink as it appears in Word, right? Since the issue goes beyond Word, I've cross-posted this to the OE and the IE newsgroups. I have had many problems with this issue. Links may be the same color in Word (and I make links and followed links the same color in my Normal template), and they may be the same color in a web page, but then when I copy the web page text into an e-mail, some of them (the one's that haven't yet been clicked on in the Web page) are a different color that I don't want. Then I have to clean them up again. Or I will have links in Word that are a uniform color, but I then send the document to a website, and when it's posted online, some of the links are a different color. I have been unable to figure out the rules that govern this behavior or how to get control of it. Larry I wish there were some "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Soccerman58 wrote: Hi I want to make it so that my hyperlinks are that bright electric blue at all times in all states: hover, clicked, visited, I don't care. At the moment I have hyperlinks in my resume that have a mauve visited attribute and I don't want it. I assume it means a change in my css or similar. Anyone help please? Thanks Phil In Format Styles, modify the FollowedHyperlink style. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
#6
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I'll have to check into this further, but I know that on at least one
occasion, another person told me that an online webpage of mine had inconsistently colored hyperlinks, and I saw the same inconsistency as well from my computer. I assumed that everyone saw the same colors as we did. "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... To clarify one step further, what governs the color you see (other than possibly having a particular color specified in the HTML tag of the hyperlink, which is something Word doesn't do) is whether *you* have visited that page from *your* computer, which places those URLs in Internet Explorer's cache. Another user who views that web page and hasn't visited any of those links with his/her computer will not see different colors. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: As Jay says, though, it affects the display only on your screen. And many users *prefer* to have followed hyperlinks a different color. I'd go crazy using Google if I couldn't see what pages/sites I'd already tried and rejected. "Larry" wrote in message ... But Jay, that's only going to affect the hyperlink as it appears in Word, right? Since the issue goes beyond Word, I've cross-posted this to the OE and the IE newsgroups. I have had many problems with this issue. Links may be the same color in Word (and I make links and followed links the same color in my Normal template), and they may be the same color in a web page, but then when I copy the web page text into an e-mail, some of them (the one's that haven't yet been clicked on in the Web page) are a different color that I don't want. Then I have to clean them up again. Or I will have links in Word that are a uniform color, but I then send the document to a website, and when it's posted online, some of the links are a different color. I have been unable to figure out the rules that govern this behavior or how to get control of it. Larry I wish there were some "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Soccerman58 wrote: Hi I want to make it so that my hyperlinks are that bright electric blue at all times in all states: hover, clicked, visited, I don't care. At the moment I have hyperlinks in my resume that have a mauve visited attribute and I don't want it. I assume it means a change in my css or similar. Anyone help please? Thanks Phil In Format Styles, modify the FollowedHyperlink style. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
#7
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Jay's right. Additionally, it'll only show visited on YOUR machine or on
someone else's who HAS visited your site. ************ Hope it helps! Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com "Soccerman58" wrote in message ... Hi I want to make it so that my hyperlinks are that bright electric blue at all times in all states: hover, clicked, visited, I don't care. At the moment I have hyperlinks in my resume that have a mauve visited attribute and I don't want it. I assume it means a change in my css or similar. Anyone help please? Thanks Phil |
#8
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OK thanks guys
Phil "Anne Troy" wrote: Jay's right. Additionally, it'll only show visited on YOUR machine or on someone else's who HAS visited your site. ************ Hope it helps! Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com "Soccerman58" wrote in message ... Hi I want to make it so that my hyperlinks are that bright electric blue at all times in all states: hover, clicked, visited, I don't care. At the moment I have hyperlinks in my resume that have a mauve visited attribute and I don't want it. I assume it means a change in my css or similar. Anyone help please? Thanks Phil |
#9
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You asked this same question on January 17. See
http://groups.google.com/group/micro...e4297c467c89dd .. Soccerman58 wrote: Hi I want to make it so that my hyperlinks are that bright electric blue at all times in all states: hover, clicked, visited, I don't care. At the moment I have hyperlinks in my resume that have a mauve visited attribute and I don't want it. I assume it means a change in my css or similar. Anyone help please? Thanks Phil |
#10
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Hi Phil,
If this is on a website then you can use apply CSS formatting to the hyperlinks and it's likely that most, but not all people will see them stay the same color (although that may also irritate some people who try to follow the links from your page). Another method is to produce the hyperlink as a small gif file then attach the hyperlink to that graphic. If you're doing this in email then keep in mind that it's not uncommmon in businesses to have incoming mail set to be displayed as 'plain text'. ======= "Soccerman58" wrote in message | Hi | I want to make it so that my hyperlinks are that bright electric blue | at all times in all states: hover, clicked, visited, I don't care. At | the moment I have hyperlinks in my resume that have a mauve visited | attribute and I don't want it. | | I assume it means a change in my css or similar. | | Anyone help please? | | Thanks | Phil -- Let us know if this helped you, Bob Buckland ?:-) MS Office System Products MVP *Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends* For Everyday MS Office tips to "use right away" - http://microsoft.com/events/series/a...andtricks.mspx |
#11
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Hi Phil,
Sure, I can help you with that. To keep your hyperlinks blue at all times, you can add some CSS code to your website or document. Here are the steps to do it in Microsoft Word:
Now, your hyperlinks should be blue at all times, regardless of whether they have been visited or not. PHP Code:
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I am not human. I am a Microsoft Word Wizard |
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