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Cross posted:
microsoft.public.word.docmanagement, microsoft.public.word.formatting.longdocs I'll set f'ups accordingly if anyone has a suggestion for the best or a better place for this post. WinXP Pro, Office 2002, Word97 and 2002 installed, living well together. Normal load of av, spyware et al protection, firewall, everything up to date and functioning well. No known machine/app problems; clean system, near's I can tell. Single User, not shared. Have a home LAN, but am not working across the LAN; have to be in the office to work on these where I have all my references handy. I really only need the ability to use the TOC links and manipulate the locations and levels of the various chapters and subchapters, or, in other words, document navigation/manipulation. Being able to select x levels to view is very helpful and will get used a pretty fair amount of the time. ---------------- I am in the process of digging out some long-stored documents for various reasons. They are mostly Word6.0/95 era, and several are Master Documents. I'm familiar with Master Document problems, and have and will likely still experience problems with them. In "playing" around as I prep to actually work on a couple of them, I've been looking for ways to avoid the master documents, and think I've found a relatively easy solution, but ... as with most "easy" things, thought I'd pass this by some people who might have a lot better knowledge basis than I. -- I open and then Save the master documents in WD 2k2 format. OK, fine. -- Closed WD, reopened it, and reloaded the just saved documents. -- It took me about fifteen minutes to trash the first Master Document set. -- Reloaded originals, tried again, took a little longer, but screwed up the subdocs fairly readily. -- Using WD97, I opened the same Masters, and have not been able to trash the master or subs or anything else. That's not a very scientific test though, and besides, I want some of the capabilities of 2k2, so I really don't want to keep them in an old WD format. -- Checking thru the diffs btwn 97/2k2, they're VERY different! OK, so maybe it's taken a step backwards, dunno. So, I says to myself, "Self, what other alternative might there be?" -- That's when I thought of plain old Outline style. -- Tried Outline, and Inserted the separate (copied from archive, not the damaged ones) into the current document in Outline View/format. -- That worked pretty good, for three editing sessions. -- On the 4th session, Word bailed on me, and stopped responding but was using about 77% of the CPU time. I gave it a good ten minutes and nothing changed, so finally I ended the process to shut WD down. -- All I lost was the last ten minutes (autosaves ON), so that's not too bad. There was a one byte difference between the original and the recovered documents, and a file compare showed it to be a space at the end of the file. Now, Word 2k2 DOES stop responding on me at times, though very infrequently. So, I'm not sure whether it was Outline mode that caused that, or the mysterious little son of a glitch that pops up every once a month or so. So, here's my question/s: Forget about WD97: It's present for other purposes. I don't wish to use it here. Word 2002: -- Is Outline mode any better than Master Document mode? These docs will range in size from 300 to about 700 pages, so I don't believe the all-in-one approach of Outline mode will hurt anything. I have one 858 page doc that's no problem but it's not setup or usable in Outline view, though it could be someday. No problems with it. I have another VERY large, in Gigabytes size, document of only about 200 pages with a ton of graphics in it. It's also no problem to work with unless you want to start at the bottom of it; then it takes a moment or so to display, but nothing unbearable. -- Is there any particular reason to NOT use Outline View, basing the Outline levels mostly on Headers, for a document? It looks like I might at the most, use 5 or 6 levels and of course a TOC, Table of Figures, etc., and eventually an Index. -- And finally, if Outline does have some recognized pecularities, how about using Open Office for this purpose? I was about to fire it up when I realized how much time I was spending on all of this and I started to wonder if I'm reinventing a wheel, so to speak. So, I thought I'd give you guys here a try and see what comes of it. I've seen some great work here. Thanks in advance for your shared opinions and experiences. Pop PS - Yes, I've read the several posts on Master Documents, but I didn't notice much of anything referring to Outline for a similar purpose. |
#2
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[I don't think any follow-ups are necessary, having this available in two
places does not seem a problem to me] I read your post kinda fast, so I may have missed something. Is there any good reason to keep your chapters in different files? Since you don't seem to be working with other people, why not just combine all chapters into one file? Though I have not studied Steve Hudson on using Master Documents safely: http://www.techwr-l.com/techwhirl/ma...dhomepage.html I get the impression that you are never supposed to do any editing in the master, but only in the subdocument. So you shouldn't spend much time in Master Document view. Your apparent question: Outline View vs. Master Documents? doesn't totally make sense to me. You didn't see anything about using Outline View to replace Master Documents because it's irrelevant, more or less. The alternative to Master Documents is combining in a single file. Outline View makes this much easier, but it is simply a feature of Word, not exactly something you implement as you do Master Documents. You switch in and out as necessary--once combined, you can use Outline or Normal or Page Layout as appropriate. Outline View makes dealing with long documents much easier, but whether those documents are 30-page chapters within a book or the entire book is beside the point, except that the longer the doc, the greater the benefits of Outline View. (see here just in case you don't know the full power of outline view ![]() http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/UsingOLView.htm It also kinda sounds as though you are editing the entirety of the work and may need to move Subsection 3.2 from Chapter 3 to Chapter 4, in which case I would say you definitely don't want to be using MDs, as my inexperienced impression is that that's the type of thing that screws them up, when done from the MD instead of via cut and paste from file to file. A single file, however, can handle that fine, and Outline View makes it easier. So far as I know there are no known issues with Outline View (except that to print a collapsed outline you can't go into Print Preview first). Hope that helps--I'm sure others will chip in. Daiya On 8/3/05 4:21 PM, "PopS" wrote: Cross posted: microsoft.public.word.docmanagement, microsoft.public.word.formatting.longdocs I'll set f'ups accordingly if anyone has a suggestion for the best or a better place for this post. WinXP Pro, Office 2002, Word97 and 2002 installed, living well together. Normal load of av, spyware et al protection, firewall, everything up to date and functioning well. No known machine/app problems; clean system, near's I can tell. Single User, not shared. Have a home LAN, but am not working across the LAN; have to be in the office to work on these where I have all my references handy. I really only need the ability to use the TOC links and manipulate the locations and levels of the various chapters and subchapters, or, in other words, document navigation/manipulation. Being able to select x levels to view is very helpful and will get used a pretty fair amount of the time. ---------------- I am in the process of digging out some long-stored documents for various reasons. They are mostly Word6.0/95 era, and several are Master Documents. I'm familiar with Master Document problems, and have and will likely still experience problems with them. In "playing" around as I prep to actually work on a couple of them, I've been looking for ways to avoid the master documents, and think I've found a relatively easy solution, but ... as with most "easy" things, thought I'd pass this by some people who might have a lot better knowledge basis than I. -- I open and then Save the master documents in WD 2k2 format. OK, fine. -- Closed WD, reopened it, and reloaded the just saved documents. -- It took me about fifteen minutes to trash the first Master Document set. -- Reloaded originals, tried again, took a little longer, but screwed up the subdocs fairly readily. -- Using WD97, I opened the same Masters, and have not been able to trash the master or subs or anything else. That's not a very scientific test though, and besides, I want some of the capabilities of 2k2, so I really don't want to keep them in an old WD format. -- Checking thru the diffs btwn 97/2k2, they're VERY different! OK, so maybe it's taken a step backwards, dunno. So, I says to myself, "Self, what other alternative might there be?" -- That's when I thought of plain old Outline style. -- Tried Outline, and Inserted the separate (copied from archive, not the damaged ones) into the current document in Outline View/format. -- That worked pretty good, for three editing sessions. -- On the 4th session, Word bailed on me, and stopped responding but was using about 77% of the CPU time. I gave it a good ten minutes and nothing changed, so finally I ended the process to shut WD down. -- All I lost was the last ten minutes (autosaves ON), so that's not too bad. There was a one byte difference between the original and the recovered documents, and a file compare showed it to be a space at the end of the file. Now, Word 2k2 DOES stop responding on me at times, though very infrequently. So, I'm not sure whether it was Outline mode that caused that, or the mysterious little son of a glitch that pops up every once a month or so. So, here's my question/s: Forget about WD97: It's present for other purposes. I don't wish to use it here. Word 2002: -- Is Outline mode any better than Master Document mode? These docs will range in size from 300 to about 700 pages, so I don't believe the all-in-one approach of Outline mode will hurt anything. I have one 858 page doc that's no problem but it's not setup or usable in Outline view, though it could be someday. No problems with it. I have another VERY large, in Gigabytes size, document of only about 200 pages with a ton of graphics in it. It's also no problem to work with unless you want to start at the bottom of it; then it takes a moment or so to display, but nothing unbearable. -- Is there any particular reason to NOT use Outline View, basing the Outline levels mostly on Headers, for a document? It looks like I might at the most, use 5 or 6 levels and of course a TOC, Table of Figures, etc., and eventually an Index. -- And finally, if Outline does have some recognized pecularities, how about using Open Office for this purpose? I was about to fire it up when I realized how much time I was spending on all of this and I started to wonder if I'm reinventing a wheel, so to speak. So, I thought I'd give you guys here a try and see what comes of it. I've seen some great work here. Thanks in advance for your shared opinions and experiences. Pop PS - Yes, I've read the several posts on Master Documents, but I didn't notice much of anything referring to Outline for a similar purpose. -- Daiya Mitchell, MVP Mac/Word Word FAQ: http://www.word.mvps.org/ MacWord Tips: http://www.word.mvps.org/MacWordNew/ What's an MVP? A volunteer! Read the FAQ: http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ |
#3
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=== Inline please:
"Daiya Mitchell" wrote in message .. . [I don't think any follow-ups are necessary, having this available in two places does not seem a problem to me] I read your post kinda fast, so I may have missed something. Is there any good reason to keep your chapters in different files? Since you don't seem to be working with other people, why not just combine all chapters into one file? === Actually, that's what I was trying to say. A single file and Outline View seem to give me just what I need, but then that bit with Word Stopped Responding popped its ugly head so I thought I'd check with some of the folks here. It happened again, so I did a Shut Down/Reboot and tried again; maybe that fixed it; so far so good. Though I have not studied Steve Hudson on using Master Documents safely: http://www.techwr-l.com/techwhirl/ma...dhomepage.html I get the impression that you are never supposed to do any editing in the master, but only in the subdocument. So you shouldn't spend much time in Master Document view. === Same impression here. I suspect one has to be more intimate with the internals of Word to actually use MD, or at least have a strict policy to do so. Your apparent question: Outline View vs. Master Documents? doesn't totally make sense to me. === Sorry, I was feeling pretty muddled when I wrote that. Wish I could take it back and start over but ... You didn't see anything about using Outline View to replace Master Documents because it's irrelevant, more or less. === That's what I was hoping to hear. It "seems" irrelevant, but then MD wasn't an issue until some folks started trying to use it in earnest. The alternative to Master Documents is combining in a single file. Outline View makes this much easier, but it is simply a feature of Word, not exactly .... (see here just in case you don't know the full power of outline view ![]() http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/UsingOLView.htm === ?? I have read that, in fact, but didn't notice anything about Outline view's powers. I'll take a look again; I thought it was all MD info. It also kinda sounds as though you are editing the entirety of the work and may need to move Subsection 3.2 from Chapter 3 to Chapter 4, in which case I would say you definitely don't want to be using MDs, as my inexperienced impression is that that's the type of thing that screws them up, when done from the MD instead of via cut and paste from file to file. A single file, however, can handle that fine, and Outline View makes it easier. === Yes, that's exactly what I need to do, and a lot of it. These are documents that were accurate "way back then", but now need some substantial redesign. The first time I trashed it with MD mode was moving chapters around rather than recreate it; it's rather long. And, I don't do macros so automating a rebuild has to be manual for me. The second time I trashed it, all I was doing was update the TOC. I was trying to get an idea how the changes were looking. I guess you recreate TOCs too with MDs. I used to be able to use MDs in old versions, but apparently not now. I'm also not too sure just what resaving all the docs to current WD format does to MD things, either. Thanks for the comeback, Pop |
#5
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"John McGhie [MVP - Word and Word Macintosh]"
wrote in message ... Hi PopS I shall assume you have read everything else in this thread, and make soe remarks that may help: === Always open to that! 1) Word 97 has the "old" table engine. It will cause less problems in old documents, but it will not handle the nested tables that can occur in Word 2000+ documents. It is not very robust if you need to get into "mega" documents. === Agreed. 97's only present because I used to use it to initiate web pages before doing the final dressups. It was quick for the mundane code and didnt' bloat. It probably didn't even deserve mention. I have much better tools now so it'll disappear when I can "remember" to remove it. 2) Word 2000 is probably the professional's choice for very long documents. It lacks the speed and power of later versions, but also lacks some of the destructive bugs (sorry: "features") of the later versions. 3) Word 2002 is a toxic soup of bugs. Don't use it for anything substantial. === Sorry to hear that since it's what I use, and have for some time. You sound pretty convinced but it's the first time I've heard it; is there any "horse's mouth" I can verify the details with? Not doubting you, just wondering what your source is and, well, I'm the curious type g. 4) Word 2003 is what I use when I need to get really serious. Very fast, very powerful, not quite as stable as Word 2000 but the power makes up for it. You have to know how to turn off the features that cause problems. === lol, what's new there? Fortunately I'm not afraid to do that and can usually figure out how. If you have better than 512 MB of memory and Windows XP on NTFS, you can push Word 2003 to 5,500 pages in a single document. If you do, you better have a fast disk and be good at waiting. But it will hang in there. === Woof! I've got the faster drives, but no 5500 pages in me!! I know what you mean though; even having been trained to "hurry up and wait", I still am not a good waiter! Actually, I've been looking into the Includes: They're new to me for some reason and I thought they'd be more complex to use than they are, but it really looks pretty simple once you get used to it. I might experiment with that; I've only pulled about 80 pages into the doc so far, so it's still in a copy/paste-able state if I needed to recereate a few revised chapters as separate files. While you could follow Steve's article and use Master Documents, I personally wouldn't... It's a lot of work and I would not select that approach for your requirement. Single document and Outline View is the way I would go. === Steve's article actually looked good, but unless I had a background approaching his, I don't think that's the way to go either. His article was good, all due respect to him, in that it told me how to "break" a MD, which I did rather quickly thanks to him, and thus (he) talked me out of using it. I want to concentrate on the writing, not on the rules of the app I'm using. But I would do it in Word 2003 on a grunty workstation. === Well, maybe I've found a reason to upgrade; I'm one of those who don't upgrade for the sake of upgrading, but maybe I have a reason now. I'll have to check with my CFO (li'l woman) and see how the financials are. g One thing I have figured out is I went from Outline stages (note type outlines I mean) to wanting to see final outcome too quickly. I should've practiced delayed gratification a little longer I guess. REgards, PopS Cheers On 4/8/05 10:29 AM, in article , "PopS" wrote: === Inline please: "Daiya Mitchell" wrote in message .. . [I don't think any follow-ups are necessary, having this available in two places does not seem a problem to me] I read your post kinda fast, so I may have missed something. Is there any good reason to keep your chapters in different files? Since you don't seem to be working with other people, why not just combine all chapters into one file? === Actually, that's what I was trying to say. A single file and Outline View seem to give me just what I need, but then that bit with Word Stopped Responding popped its ugly head so I thought I'd check with some of the folks here. It happened again, so I did a Shut Down/Reboot and tried again; maybe that fixed it; so far so good. Though I have not studied Steve Hudson on using Master Documents safely: http://www.techwr-l.com/techwhirl/ma...dhomepage.html I get the impression that you are never supposed to do any editing in the master, but only in the subdocument. So you shouldn't spend much time in Master Document view. === Same impression here. I suspect one has to be more intimate with the internals of Word to actually use MD, or at least have a strict policy to do so. Your apparent question: Outline View vs. Master Documents? doesn't totally make sense to me. === Sorry, I was feeling pretty muddled when I wrote that. Wish I could take it back and start over but ... You didn't see anything about using Outline View to replace Master Documents because it's irrelevant, more or less. === That's what I was hoping to hear. It "seems" irrelevant, but then MD wasn't an issue until some folks started trying to use it in earnest. The alternative to Master Documents is combining in a single file. Outline View makes this much easier, but it is simply a feature of Word, not exactly ... (see here just in case you don't know the full power of outline view ![]() http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/UsingOLView.htm === ?? I have read that, in fact, but didn't notice anything about Outline view's powers. I'll take a look again; I thought it was all MD info. It also kinda sounds as though you are editing the entirety of the work and may need to move Subsection 3.2 from Chapter 3 to Chapter 4, in which case I would say you definitely don't want to be using MDs, as my inexperienced impression is that that's the type of thing that screws them up, when done from the MD instead of via cut and paste from file to file. A single file, however, can handle that fine, and Outline View makes it easier. === Yes, that's exactly what I need to do, and a lot of it. These are documents that were accurate "way back then", but now need some substantial redesign. The first time I trashed it with MD mode was moving chapters around rather than recreate it; it's rather long. And, I don't do macros so automating a rebuild has to be manual for me. The second time I trashed it, all I was doing was update the TOC. I was trying to get an idea how the changes were looking. I guess you recreate TOCs too with MDs. I used to be able to use MDs in old versions, but apparently not now. I'm also not too sure just what resaving all the docs to current WD format does to MD things, either. Thanks for the comeback, Pop -- Please reply to the newsgroup to maintain the thread. Please do not email me unless I ask you to. John McGhie Microsoft MVP, Word and Word for Macintosh. Consultant Technical Writer Sydney, Australia +61 4 1209 1410 |
#6
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G'day "PopS" ,
First up, if you are trying to convert the mess of the files you have into a single 'flat' file, save each one as XML, HTML or RTF (order of preference) and use those rtf files to create a new document - you may avoid some corruption coming through. Second, 2002. The horses mouth is the MVPs, we all agree there are serious stability issues with 2002 through every day experience. Let alone the joys of the Char char etc. I want to concentrate on the writing, not on the rules of the app I'm using. Correct. Until that sucker starts to approach 32mb or 2k pages then there is only social, political or geographical requirements to force you to use a master. Finally, I couldn't urge you more strongly to upgrade 2002 to 2003, especially if you have reasonable-sized documents to manage. Steve Hudson - Word Heretic steve from wordheretic.com (Email replies require payment) Without prejudice PopS reckoned: "John McGhie [MVP - Word and Word Macintosh]" wrote in message ... Hi PopS I shall assume you have read everything else in this thread, and make soe remarks that may help: === Always open to that! 1) Word 97 has the "old" table engine. It will cause less problems in old documents, but it will not handle the nested tables that can occur in Word 2000+ documents. It is not very robust if you need to get into "mega" documents. === Agreed. 97's only present because I used to use it to initiate web pages before doing the final dressups. It was quick for the mundane code and didnt' bloat. It probably didn't even deserve mention. I have much better tools now so it'll disappear when I can "remember" to remove it. 2) Word 2000 is probably the professional's choice for very long documents. It lacks the speed and power of later versions, but also lacks some of the destructive bugs (sorry: "features") of the later versions. 3) Word 2002 is a toxic soup of bugs. Don't use it for anything substantial. === Sorry to hear that since it's what I use, and have for some time. You sound pretty convinced but it's the first time I've heard it; is there any "horse's mouth" I can verify the details with? Not doubting you, just wondering what your source is and, well, I'm the curious type g. 4) Word 2003 is what I use when I need to get really serious. Very fast, very powerful, not quite as stable as Word 2000 but the power makes up for it. You have to know how to turn off the features that cause problems. === lol, what's new there? Fortunately I'm not afraid to do that and can usually figure out how. If you have better than 512 MB of memory and Windows XP on NTFS, you can push Word 2003 to 5,500 pages in a single document. If you do, you better have a fast disk and be good at waiting. But it will hang in there. === Woof! I've got the faster drives, but no 5500 pages in me!! I know what you mean though; even having been trained to "hurry up and wait", I still am not a good waiter! Actually, I've been looking into the Includes: They're new to me for some reason and I thought they'd be more complex to use than they are, but it really looks pretty simple once you get used to it. I might experiment with that; I've only pulled about 80 pages into the doc so far, so it's still in a copy/paste-able state if I needed to recereate a few revised chapters as separate files. While you could follow Steve's article and use Master Documents, I personally wouldn't... It's a lot of work and I would not select that approach for your requirement. Single document and Outline View is the way I would go. === Steve's article actually looked good, but unless I had a background approaching his, I don't think that's the way to go either. His article was good, all due respect to him, in that it told me how to "break" a MD, which I did rather quickly thanks to him, and thus (he) talked me out of using it. I want to concentrate on the writing, not on the rules of the app I'm using. But I would do it in Word 2003 on a grunty workstation. === Well, maybe I've found a reason to upgrade; I'm one of those who don't upgrade for the sake of upgrading, but maybe I have a reason now. I'll have to check with my CFO (li'l woman) and see how the financials are. g One thing I have figured out is I went from Outline stages (note type outlines I mean) to wanting to see final outcome too quickly. I should've practiced delayed gratification a little longer I guess. REgards, PopS Cheers On 4/8/05 10:29 AM, in article , "PopS" wrote: === Inline please: "Daiya Mitchell" wrote in message .. . [I don't think any follow-ups are necessary, having this available in two places does not seem a problem to me] I read your post kinda fast, so I may have missed something. Is there any good reason to keep your chapters in different files? Since you don't seem to be working with other people, why not just combine all chapters into one file? === Actually, that's what I was trying to say. A single file and Outline View seem to give me just what I need, but then that bit with Word Stopped Responding popped its ugly head so I thought I'd check with some of the folks here. It happened again, so I did a Shut Down/Reboot and tried again; maybe that fixed it; so far so good. Though I have not studied Steve Hudson on using Master Documents safely: http://www.techwr-l.com/techwhirl/ma...dhomepage.html I get the impression that you are never supposed to do any editing in the master, but only in the subdocument. So you shouldn't spend much time in Master Document view. === Same impression here. I suspect one has to be more intimate with the internals of Word to actually use MD, or at least have a strict policy to do so. Your apparent question: Outline View vs. Master Documents? doesn't totally make sense to me. === Sorry, I was feeling pretty muddled when I wrote that. Wish I could take it back and start over but ... You didn't see anything about using Outline View to replace Master Documents because it's irrelevant, more or less. === That's what I was hoping to hear. It "seems" irrelevant, but then MD wasn't an issue until some folks started trying to use it in earnest. The alternative to Master Documents is combining in a single file. Outline View makes this much easier, but it is simply a feature of Word, not exactly ... (see here just in case you don't know the full power of outline view ![]() http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/UsingOLView.htm === ?? I have read that, in fact, but didn't notice anything about Outline view's powers. I'll take a look again; I thought it was all MD info. It also kinda sounds as though you are editing the entirety of the work and may need to move Subsection 3.2 from Chapter 3 to Chapter 4, in which case I would say you definitely don't want to be using MDs, as my inexperienced impression is that that's the type of thing that screws them up, when done from the MD instead of via cut and paste from file to file. A single file, however, can handle that fine, and Outline View makes it easier. === Yes, that's exactly what I need to do, and a lot of it. These are documents that were accurate "way back then", but now need some substantial redesign. The first time I trashed it with MD mode was moving chapters around rather than recreate it; it's rather long. And, I don't do macros so automating a rebuild has to be manual for me. The second time I trashed it, all I was doing was update the TOC. I was trying to get an idea how the changes were looking. I guess you recreate TOCs too with MDs. I used to be able to use MDs in old versions, but apparently not now. I'm also not too sure just what resaving all the docs to current WD format does to MD things, either. Thanks for the comeback, Pop -- Please reply to the newsgroup to maintain the thread. Please do not email me unless I ask you to. John McGhie Microsoft MVP, Word and Word for Macintosh. Consultant Technical Writer Sydney, Australia +61 4 1209 1410 |
#7
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Steve,
Could you elaborate on why you urge strongly to upgrade to Word 2003 for large documents? We're still using 2002, and simply haven't upgraded because we were under the impression it didn't have any significant new features or bug fixes that we were interested in (and were a bit worried that something would break somewhere! ![]() Thanks. Chip |
#8
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G'day "Chip Orange" ,
2002 = unstable, new buggy features, shocking new style model etc 2003 contains auto-open magic to fix many issues we have with log documents, especially resolving the plethora of unused list templates that we arent allowed to delete. Additionally, in 2003 you can force the user to use the provided styles and no manual formatting, which for long docs is especially useful in keeping 'corruption' and confusion levels down. Last, Save As XML - a joyous way to keep master document corruption down to a minimum. Steve Hudson - Word Heretic steve from wordheretic.com (Email replies require payment) Without prejudice Chip Orange reckoned: Steve, Could you elaborate on why you urge strongly to upgrade to Word 2003 for large documents? We're still using 2002, and simply haven't upgraded because we were under the impression it didn't have any significant new features or bug fixes that we were interested in (and were a bit worried that something would break somewhere! ![]() Thanks. Chip |
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