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I mail-merged 10 records of source data from MS Excel 2003 into an one page
MS Word 2003 template. The mail merge completed sucessfully with a 10-page outcome Word file containing all records from the merge. My question is: is there a way I can compare the merged data in the final Word document with the original Excel data? In other words, if I have firstName: A, B, C in the source Excel file, I want to know whether after the mail merge value A, B, C is in the merged document with the exact value and order as original. Thanks in advance!!! |
#2
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Most people have better things to do. The only way to do it would be to
physically compare the data in Excel source with that in the document. -- 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 "Mushinma" wrote in message ... I mail-merged 10 records of source data from MS Excel 2003 into an one page MS Word 2003 template. The mail merge completed sucessfully with a 10-page outcome Word file containing all records from the merge. My question is: is there a way I can compare the merged data in the final Word document with the original Excel data? In other words, if I have firstName: A, B, C in the source Excel file, I want to know whether after the mail merge value A, B, C is in the merged document with the exact value and order as original. Thanks in advance!!! |
#3
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The reason for this exercise is to fulfill some audit control purposes. The
current process in place is Person A performs the mail merge and then Person B spot checks the mail merge result with original Excel data source. However, a lot of time, the data to be merged could be large (up to 1000 separate records), which makes the spot check really time consuming and cumbersome. -- Learning InfoPath "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote: Most people have better things to do. The only way to do it would be to physically compare the data in Excel source with that in the document. -- 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 "Mushinma" wrote in message ... I mail-merged 10 records of source data from MS Excel 2003 into an one page MS Word 2003 template. The mail merge completed sucessfully with a 10-page outcome Word file containing all records from the merge. My question is: is there a way I can compare the merged data in the final Word document with the original Excel data? In other words, if I have firstName: A, B, C in the source Excel file, I want to know whether after the mail merge value A, B, C is in the merged document with the exact value and order as original. Thanks in advance!!! |
#4
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I do not think that there is any other way of achieving the result. Have
you ever found a discrepancy between the merged output and the data in Excel? -- 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 "Mushinma" wrote in message ... The reason for this exercise is to fulfill some audit control purposes. The current process in place is Person A performs the mail merge and then Person B spot checks the mail merge result with original Excel data source. However, a lot of time, the data to be merged could be large (up to 1000 separate records), which makes the spot check really time consuming and cumbersome. -- Learning InfoPath "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote: Most people have better things to do. The only way to do it would be to physically compare the data in Excel source with that in the document. -- 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 "Mushinma" wrote in message ... I mail-merged 10 records of source data from MS Excel 2003 into an one page MS Word 2003 template. The mail merge completed sucessfully with a 10-page outcome Word file containing all records from the merge. My question is: is there a way I can compare the merged data in the final Word document with the original Excel data? In other words, if I have firstName: A, B, C in the source Excel file, I want to know whether after the mail merge value A, B, C is in the merged document with the exact value and order as original. Thanks in advance!!! |
#5
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Thanks for getting back to me. I have not found any discrepancy between the
mail merge result and source data. However, there might be opportunities for human manipulation after the mail merge. for instance, change Number A to Number B in Word doc We are trying to do a final comparison before the mail merge document become effective to catch the manipulation that has been done to it to eliminate any error. -- Learning InfoPath "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote: I do not think that there is any other way of achieving the result. Have you ever found a discrepancy between the merged output and the data in Excel? -- 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 "Mushinma" wrote in message ... The reason for this exercise is to fulfill some audit control purposes. The current process in place is Person A performs the mail merge and then Person B spot checks the mail merge result with original Excel data source. However, a lot of time, the data to be merged could be large (up to 1000 separate records), which makes the spot check really time consuming and cumbersome. -- Learning InfoPath "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote: Most people have better things to do. The only way to do it would be to physically compare the data in Excel source with that in the document. -- 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 "Mushinma" wrote in message ... I mail-merged 10 records of source data from MS Excel 2003 into an one page MS Word 2003 template. The mail merge completed sucessfully with a 10-page outcome Word file containing all records from the merge. My question is: is there a way I can compare the merged data in the final Word document with the original Excel data? In other words, if I have firstName: A, B, C in the source Excel file, I want to know whether after the mail merge value A, B, C is in the merged document with the exact value and order as original. Thanks in advance!!! |
#6
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Execute the merge directly to a printer and then the user will not have the
opportunity to change anything, or use the addin that you can down load from http://www.gmayor.com/individual_merge_letters.htm and execute the merge to separate .pdf files rather that Word documents. But, if a user is likely to change the result of a merge, aren't they as likely to change the data source? -- 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 "Mushinma" wrote in message ... Thanks for getting back to me. I have not found any discrepancy between the mail merge result and source data. However, there might be opportunities for human manipulation after the mail merge. for instance, change Number A to Number B in Word doc We are trying to do a final comparison before the merge document become effective to catch the manipulation that has been done to it to eliminate any error. -- Learning InfoPath "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote: I do not think that there is any other way of achieving the result. Have you ever found a discrepancy between the merged output and the data in Excel? -- 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 "Mushinma" wrote in message ... The reason for this exercise is to fulfill some audit control purposes. The current process in place is Person A performs the mail merge and then Person B spot checks the mail merge result with original Excel data source. However, a lot of time, the data to be merged could be large (up to 1000 separate records), which makes the spot check really time consuming and cumbersome. -- Learning InfoPath "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote: Most people have better things to do. The only way to do it would be to physically compare the data in Excel source with that in the document. -- 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 "Mushinma" wrote in message ... I mail-merged 10 records of source data from MS Excel 2003 into an one page MS Word 2003 template. The mail merge completed sucessfully with a 10-page outcome Word file containing all records from the merge. My question is: is there a way I can compare the merged data in the final Word document with the original Excel data? In other words, if I have firstName: A, B, C in the source Excel file, I want to know whether after the mail merge value A, B, C is in the merged document with the exact value and order as original. Thanks in advance!!! |
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