Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.word.formatting.longdocs
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
A quite arcane bit of arcana, but anyway, here goes:
Many Word versions ago I learned to suppress the default, blank, Document1 from being created when starting Word from Program Files in the Start menu. This is done by putting /n after the file path of winword.exe in the Target field of the Properties of the Start menu shortcut. (Sensible applications put it in Tools | Options, but no matter.) I'm pretty sure at least one version I used of Word enabled that "/n" thing to work in just the way it's described in Word Help. However, it wasn't long before the shortcut created by an "out of the box" installation of Word had that Target field grayed out when you look at the shortcut's Properties. Then, to use the "/n" suppression, one has to create a new, standard, shortcut to Word, with an active Target field, etc. Can anyone tell me why the modern default shortcut has the structure it does? Does it have something to do with other Office applications? (Also, Excel's method for suppressing a blank file is different from, though similar to, Word's.) |
#2
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.word.formatting.longdocs
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 2 May 2008 16:19:35 -0400, "WilliamWMeyer" wrote:
A quite arcane bit of arcana, but anyway, here goes: Many Word versions ago I learned to suppress the default, blank, Document1 from being created when starting Word from Program Files in the Start menu. This is done by putting /n after the file path of winword.exe in the Target field of the Properties of the Start menu shortcut. (Sensible applications put it in Tools | Options, but no matter.) I'm pretty sure at least one version I used of Word enabled that "/n" thing to work in just the way it's described in Word Help. However, it wasn't long before the shortcut created by an "out of the box" installation of Word had that Target field grayed out when you look at the shortcut's Properties. Then, to use the "/n" suppression, one has to create a new, standard, shortcut to Word, with an active Target field, etc. Can anyone tell me why the modern default shortcut has the structure it does? Does it have something to do with other Office applications? (Also, Excel's method for suppressing a blank file is different from, though similar to, Word's.) In recent versions of Windows, there are two kinds of shortcuts. The kind you have doesn't allow editing, but you can throw that one away and make your own shortcut of the editable kind. To make your own, use Windows Explorer to browse to the C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office folder, go down one more subfolder to the one for your version of Office, right-click the WinWord.exe file, and choose Send To Desktop (as shortcut). Repeat for Excel.exe. (No, I don't know exactly what the difference between the two kinds is, or why Microsoft felt compelled to create a second kind that seems to be useless.) -- 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
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.word.formatting.longdocs
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi William,
The deployed shortcuts are tied to registry entries. These are provided for a couple of reasons (a) they're part of the repair/reinstallation process and can be restored by the Office installer if folks deleted them (b) it allows companies [primarily] to deploy or hide the set of icons they want for Office and in locations they choose so that they're always in a consistent location (c) to make them somewhat tamperproof for both security and consistency in location and predictability in what they do. In a company deployment the ability to create a shortcut file may have been disabled, or the login script may simply harvest and delete any .LNK files not expected to be there. ============= "WilliamWMeyer" wrote in message ... A quite arcane bit of arcana, but anyway, here goes: Many Word versions ago I learned to suppress the default, blank, Document1 from being created when starting Word from Program Files in the Start menu. This is done by putting /n after the file path of winword.exe in the Target field of the Properties of the Start menu shortcut. (Sensible applications put it in Tools | Options, but no matter.) I'm pretty sure at least one version I used of Word enabled that "/n" thing to work in just the way it's described in Word Help. However, it wasn't long before the shortcut created by an "out of the box" installation of Word had that Target field grayed out when you look at the shortcut's Properties. Then, to use the "/n" suppression, one has to create a new, standard, shortcut to Word, with an active Target field, etc. Can anyone tell me why the modern default shortcut has the structure it does? Does it have something to do with other Office applications? (Also, Excel's method for suppressing a blank file is different from, though similar to, Word's.) -- Bob Buckland ?:-) MS Office System Products MVP *Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends* |
#4
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.word.formatting.longdocs
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks for the responses, Jay and Bob
|
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
How do I stop the EZP icon from appearing on the menu bar? | Microsoft Word Help | |||
how do i get my word icon back on the program menu? | Microsoft Word Help | |||
want to remove Show/Hide icon from the start of all documents | Microsoft Word Help | |||
Changed word (and other) icon when adobe 7.0 installed | Microsoft Word Help | |||
I just installed MS Word 2003 on my laptop and the icon does not . | Microsoft Word Help |