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#1
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Organise and hide text in a paper
I want to structure my text in a text program.
I would like to have an index with headlines as hyperlinks So when I push a headline I get the text. I also want to make minor headlines (like the function "increase indent") so the text will be constructed like a folders Explorer and the hided text in an another folder and so on... e.g. Do Word2002 have that facilities? Poul |
#2
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You can do this by using Word's "Heading" styles and the outline view.
Heading styles can be applied to the titles (headlines) throughout your document. Highest level is Heading 1. Its subtopics would be Heading 2 and so forth. The Outline view is the fourth button from the left in the view selections by your horizontal slide bar at the bottom of the screen. You can also use the menus: View Outline. Each heading with have a fat plus sign next to it. You can double click the plus sign to expand/collapse the level. All text for that level and all subheadings will be collapsed/expanded together. Hope this helps. "pouldanborg" wrote: I want to structure my text in a text program. I would like to have an index with headlines as hyperlinks So when I push a headline I get the text. I also want to make minor headlines (like the function "increase indent") so the text will be constructed like a folders Explorer and the hided text in an another folder and so on... e.g. Do Word2002 have that facilities? Poul |
#3
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Organise and hide text in a paper
I am doing the same basic thing for training purposes at my company. The
only problem is, I would like it to only expand the immediate level below the section I expand. I understand this can be done by clicking on the + and - buttons, or by using alt+ and alt-, but this is not nearly as intuitive as just double clicking on the topic you want to see. Example Full Tree: Option 1 Option a Option 2 Option a Option X Option b Example Starting Tree: Option 1 Option 2 Desired Tree Structure After Double Clicking on Option 2: Option 1 Option 2 Option a Option b Thanks for any help you can provide. "Ann Scharpf" wrote: You can do this by using Word's "Heading" styles and the outline view. Heading styles can be applied to the titles (headlines) throughout your document. Highest level is Heading 1. Its subtopics would be Heading 2 and so forth. The Outline view is the fourth button from the left in the view selections by your horizontal slide bar at the bottom of the screen. You can also use the menus: View Outline. Each heading with have a fat plus sign next to it. You can double click the plus sign to expand/collapse the level. All text for that level and all subheadings will be collapsed/expanded together. Hope this helps. "pouldanborg" wrote: I want to structure my text in a text program. I would like to have an index with headlines as hyperlinks So when I push a headline I get the text. I also want to make minor headlines (like the function "increase indent") so the text will be constructed like a folders Explorer and the hided text in an another folder and so on... e.g. Do Word2002 have that facilities? Poul |
#4
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Organise and hide text in a paper
Ann,
This solution is fine if you are authoring a document but is not acceptable for a finished document. This function should be usable in normal display mode, and cleaned up so it doesn't change the text format, or select it when you click on the symbol. The symbol should also be a finished looking symbol as opposed to the outlined plus sign. I think you should be able to select any amount of text that has any content. I.E. Text attributes, heading styles, tables and graphs, and even pictures. "Ann Scharpf" wrote: You can do this by using Word's "Heading" styles and the outline view. Heading styles can be applied to the titles (headlines) throughout your document. Highest level is Heading 1. Its subtopics would be Heading 2 and so forth. The Outline view is the fourth button from the left in the view selections by your horizontal slide bar at the bottom of the screen. You can also use the menus: View Outline. Each heading with have a fat plus sign next to it. You can double click the plus sign to expand/collapse the level. All text for that level and all subheadings will be collapsed/expanded together. Hope this helps. "pouldanborg" wrote: I want to structure my text in a text program. I would like to have an index with headlines as hyperlinks So when I push a headline I get the text. I also want to make minor headlines (like the function "increase indent") so the text will be constructed like a folders Explorer and the hided text in an another folder and so on... e.g. Do Word2002 have that facilities? Poul |
#5
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Organise and hide text in a paper
You are obviously expecting Word to function in a way it was never designed
to do. Word is primarily designed to produce *printed* documents. -- 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. "AlexScianna" wrote in message ... Ann, This solution is fine if you are authoring a document but is not acceptable for a finished document. This function should be usable in normal display mode, and cleaned up so it doesn't change the text format, or select it when you click on the symbol. The symbol should also be a finished looking symbol as opposed to the outlined plus sign. I think you should be able to select any amount of text that has any content. I.E. Text attributes, heading styles, tables and graphs, and even pictures. "Ann Scharpf" wrote: You can do this by using Word's "Heading" styles and the outline view. Heading styles can be applied to the titles (headlines) throughout your document. Highest level is Heading 1. Its subtopics would be Heading 2 and so forth. The Outline view is the fourth button from the left in the view selections by your horizontal slide bar at the bottom of the screen. You can also use the menus: View Outline. Each heading with have a fat plus sign next to it. You can double click the plus sign to expand/collapse the level. All text for that level and all subheadings will be collapsed/expanded together. Hope this helps. "pouldanborg" wrote: I want to structure my text in a text program. I would like to have an index with headlines as hyperlinks So when I push a headline I get the text. I also want to make minor headlines (like the function "increase indent") so the text will be constructed like a folders Explorer and the hided text in an another folder and so on... e.g. Do Word2002 have that facilities? Poul |
#6
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Organise and hide text in a paper
Actually I was describing a refinement to what Word already does, as
described by Ann Scharpf, earlier. My intent was to add my vote for an inhancement, for I believe if enough people ask for it, perhaps a seed would be planted, that would eventually grow into something like we are looking for. However, to your remark about Word being designed to produce *Printed* documents (and I understand your hedging on printed), if they were disigned primarlly to produce *printed* documents, why the Comment function or the collapsable header function. I contend that word documents are read on line more often than they are printed, and an enhancement like that would make it a more useful tool for both author and reader. And if a document were to actually be priinted, there could be an option to print or not print collapsed sections. But thank you, Suzanne, for the insight on what the design philosophy is for Word. .-) "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: You are obviously expecting Word to function in a way it was never designed to do. Word is primarily designed to produce *printed* documents. -- 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. "AlexScianna" wrote in message ... Ann, This solution is fine if you are authoring a document but is not acceptable for a finished document. This function should be usable in normal display mode, and cleaned up so it doesn't change the text format, or select it when you click on the symbol. The symbol should also be a finished looking symbol as opposed to the outlined plus sign. I think you should be able to select any amount of text that has any content. I.E. Text attributes, heading styles, tables and graphs, and even pictures. "Ann Scharpf" wrote: You can do this by using Word's "Heading" styles and the outline view. Heading styles can be applied to the titles (headlines) throughout your document. Highest level is Heading 1. Its subtopics would be Heading 2 and so forth. The Outline view is the fourth button from the left in the view selections by your horizontal slide bar at the bottom of the screen. You can also use the menus: View Outline. Each heading with have a fat plus sign next to it. You can double click the plus sign to expand/collapse the level. All text for that level and all subheadings will be collapsed/expanded together. Hope this helps. "pouldanborg" wrote: I want to structure my text in a text program. I would like to have an index with headlines as hyperlinks So when I push a headline I get the text. I also want to make minor headlines (like the function "increase indent") so the text will be constructed like a folders Explorer and the hided text in an another folder and so on... e.g. Do Word2002 have that facilities? Poul |
#7
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Organise and hide text in a paper
One of the reasons for the "balloons" in Word 2002 and above was to permit
comments (and other markup) to be printed without affecting the layout of the document. This change was made at the request of corporate customers who use Word to create very complex printed documents (such as magazines and newspapers). Yes, many documents are read online, but even those that are read online during editing are overwhelmingly destined for eventual printout in some form or other. The Outline view is intended as an aid to composition and organization, not reading (Document Map could be viewed as the latter, perhaps). The hyperlinked TOC is also an aid to navigation. It is certainly true that Word is currently much more targeted to an online world, especially Web-centric applications, but Word is a terrible HTML editor and should not be used to create Web pages just because it can be, and although Word can be used to create online forms, organizations that have a need for sophisticated forms would be better advised to use InfoPath, which is a much more powerful application for this purpose. -- 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. "AlexScianna" wrote in message ... Actually I was describing a refinement to what Word already does, as described by Ann Scharpf, earlier. My intent was to add my vote for an inhancement, for I believe if enough people ask for it, perhaps a seed would be planted, that would eventually grow into something like we are looking for. However, to your remark about Word being designed to produce *Printed* documents (and I understand your hedging on printed), if they were disigned primarlly to produce *printed* documents, why the Comment function or the collapsable header function. I contend that word documents are read on line more often than they are printed, and an enhancement like that would make it a more useful tool for both author and reader. And if a document were to actually be priinted, there could be an option to print or not collapsed sections. But thank you, Suzanne, for the insight on what the design philosophy is for Word. .-) "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: You are obviously expecting Word to function in a way it was never designed to do. Word is primarily designed to produce *printed* documents. -- 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. "AlexScianna" wrote in message ... Ann, This solution is fine if you are authoring a document but is not acceptable for a finished document. This function should be usable in normal display mode, and cleaned up so it doesn't change the text format, or select it when you click on the symbol. The symbol should also be a finished looking symbol as opposed to the outlined plus sign. I think you should be able to select any amount of text that has any content. I.E. Text attributes, heading styles, tables and graphs, and even pictures. "Ann Scharpf" wrote: You can do this by using Word's "Heading" styles and the outline view. Heading styles can be applied to the titles (headlines) throughout your document. Highest level is Heading 1. Its subtopics would be Heading 2 and so forth. The Outline view is the fourth button from the left in the view selections by your horizontal slide bar at the bottom of the screen. You can also use the menus: View Outline. Each heading with have a fat plus sign next to it. You can double click the plus sign to expand/collapse the level. All text for that level and all subheadings will be collapsed/expanded together. Hope this helps. "pouldanborg" wrote: I want to structure my text in a text program. I would like to have an index with headlines as hyperlinks So when I push a headline I get the text. I also want to make minor headlines (like the function "increase indent") so the text will be constructed like a folders Explorer and the hided text in an another folder and so on... e.g. Do Word2002 have that facilities? Poul |