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#1
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Hi,
I'm not sure this can be done, but ... going to ask anyway. XP Pro SP3 and Office 2002. Is there a way to reverse the order of pages in a Word document? Last page becomes first, next to last becomes next, and so on. Instead of 1, 2, 3, .... the physical appearance changes to 42, 41, 40 ... 3, 2, 1. I have a Word document which is displayed 'upside down': In other words, the LAST page is page 1, next to last is page 2, and so on down to the first page, which is page 42, but at the bottom of the file; last page shown. This is meant to be an onscreen reference, so printing in reverse order won't suffice; access is going to be onscreen. I made some brief tests as simply cutting/pasting the pages into their correct order but quickly got lost and botched the job; mainly because as soon as you move a page, its page number changes in Word, so without making each page large enough to see and comparing next/following pages, one gets lost pretty quickly. Thought about a macro, move bottom to position 1, bottom to position 2, etc, but I'm not able to get anything to work. I just don't know VBA well enough. Any thoughts or ideas on how to accomplish this? TIA, Twayne |
#2
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Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement,microsoft.public.word.formatting.longdocs
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Word is not a page alyout application so there are no 'pages' as such, but a
continuous document flowed to the page layout settings, as dictated by the current printer driver. What may work for you is to output to a PDF printer driver, such as PrimoPDF (or of course Acrobat) and set the option to 'print' in reverse order. This will produce a document viewable on screen with Adobe Reader that is in reverse page order, retaining the original page numbering. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org "Twayne" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm not sure this can be done, but ... going to ask anyway. XP Pro SP3 and Office 2002. Is there a way to reverse the order of pages in a Word document? Last page becomes first, next to last becomes next, and so on. Instead of 1, 2, 3, ... the physical appearance changes to 42, 41, 40 ... 3, 2, 1. I have a Word document which is displayed 'upside down': In other words, the LAST page is page 1, next to last is page 2, and so on down to the first page, which is page 42, but at the bottom of the file; last page shown. This is meant to be an onscreen reference, so printing in reverse order won't suffice; access is going to be onscreen. I made some brief tests as simply cutting/pasting the pages into their correct order but quickly got lost and botched the job; mainly because as soon as you move a page, its page number changes in Word, so without making each page large enough to see and comparing next/following pages, one gets lost pretty quickly. Thought about a macro, move bottom to position 1, bottom to position 2, etc, but I'm not able to get anything to work. I just don't know VBA well enough. Any thoughts or ideas on how to accomplish this? TIA, Twayne |
#3
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Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement,microsoft.public.word.formatting.longdocs
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Word is not a page alyout application so there are no 'pages' as such, but a
continuous document flowed to the page layout settings, as dictated by the current printer driver. What may work for you is to output to a PDF printer driver, such as PrimoPDF (or of course Acrobat) and set the option to 'print' in reverse order. This will produce a document viewable on screen with Adobe Reader that is in reverse page order, retaining the original page numbering. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org "Twayne" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm not sure this can be done, but ... going to ask anyway. XP Pro SP3 and Office 2002. Is there a way to reverse the order of pages in a Word document? Last page becomes first, next to last becomes next, and so on. Instead of 1, 2, 3, ... the physical appearance changes to 42, 41, 40 ... 3, 2, 1. I have a Word document which is displayed 'upside down': In other words, the LAST page is page 1, next to last is page 2, and so on down to the first page, which is page 42, but at the bottom of the file; last page shown. This is meant to be an onscreen reference, so printing in reverse order won't suffice; access is going to be onscreen. I made some brief tests as simply cutting/pasting the pages into their correct order but quickly got lost and botched the job; mainly because as soon as you move a page, its page number changes in Word, so without making each page large enough to see and comparing next/following pages, one gets lost pretty quickly. Thought about a macro, move bottom to position 1, bottom to position 2, etc, but I'm not able to get anything to work. I just don't know VBA well enough. Any thoughts or ideas on how to accomplish this? TIA, Twayne |
#4
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Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement,microsoft.public.word.formatting.longdocs
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In ,
Graham Mayor typed: Word is not a page alyout application so there are no 'pages' as such, but a continuous document flowed to the page layout settings, as dictated by the current printer driver. What may work for you is to output to a PDF printer driver, such as PrimoPDF (or of course Acrobat) and set the option to 'print' in reverse order. This will produce a document viewable on screen with Adobe Reader that is in reverse page order, retaining the original page numbering. I've solved it with a rather clunky macro I wrote so I'm all set now. It failed to move the graphics pages but there were only a few of those, so no problem. The OCR that created it used Section Breaks with starting the next section on a new page, so it wasn't too hard to figure out. Then at the end I had it replace the section breaks with page feeds to maintain the page splits and all worked out. However you wish to interpret Word's or any other apps method of handling pages is fine with me. Turned out to not be a big problem, fortunately. Unfortunately though the page numbers weren't part of the document; they only existed in the application that displayed the pages. Cheers, Twayne` "Twayne" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm not sure this can be done, but ... going to ask anyway. XP Pro SP3 and Office 2002. Is there a way to reverse the order of pages in a Word document? Last page becomes first, next to last becomes next, and so on. Instead of 1, 2, 3, ... the physical appearance changes to 42, 41, 40 ... 3, 2, 1. I have a Word document which is displayed 'upside down': In other words, the LAST page is page 1, next to last is page 2, and so on down to the first page, which is page 42, but at the bottom of the file; last page shown. This is meant to be an onscreen reference, so printing in reverse order won't suffice; access is going to be onscreen. I made some brief tests as simply cutting/pasting the pages into their correct order but quickly got lost and botched the job; mainly because as soon as you move a page, its page number changes in Word, so without making each page large enough to see and comparing next/following pages, one gets lost pretty quickly. Thought about a macro, move bottom to position 1, bottom to position 2, etc, but I'm not able to get anything to work. I just don't know VBA well enough. Any thoughts or ideas on how to accomplish this? TIA, Twayne |
#5
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Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement,microsoft.public.word.formatting.longdocs
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In ,
Graham Mayor typed: Word is not a page alyout application so there are no 'pages' as such, but a continuous document flowed to the page layout settings, as dictated by the current printer driver. What may work for you is to output to a PDF printer driver, such as PrimoPDF (or of course Acrobat) and set the option to 'print' in reverse order. This will produce a document viewable on screen with Adobe Reader that is in reverse page order, retaining the original page numbering. I've solved it with a rather clunky macro I wrote so I'm all set now. It failed to move the graphics pages but there were only a few of those, so no problem. The OCR that created it used Section Breaks with starting the next section on a new page, so it wasn't too hard to figure out. Then at the end I had it replace the section breaks with page feeds to maintain the page splits and all worked out. However you wish to interpret Word's or any other apps method of handling pages is fine with me. Turned out to not be a big problem, fortunately. Unfortunately though the page numbers weren't part of the document; they only existed in the application that displayed the pages. Cheers, Twayne` "Twayne" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm not sure this can be done, but ... going to ask anyway. XP Pro SP3 and Office 2002. Is there a way to reverse the order of pages in a Word document? Last page becomes first, next to last becomes next, and so on. Instead of 1, 2, 3, ... the physical appearance changes to 42, 41, 40 ... 3, 2, 1. I have a Word document which is displayed 'upside down': In other words, the LAST page is page 1, next to last is page 2, and so on down to the first page, which is page 42, but at the bottom of the file; last page shown. This is meant to be an onscreen reference, so printing in reverse order won't suffice; access is going to be onscreen. I made some brief tests as simply cutting/pasting the pages into their correct order but quickly got lost and botched the job; mainly because as soon as you move a page, its page number changes in Word, so without making each page large enough to see and comparing next/following pages, one gets lost pretty quickly. Thought about a macro, move bottom to position 1, bottom to position 2, etc, but I'm not able to get anything to work. I just don't know VBA well enough. Any thoughts or ideas on how to accomplish this? TIA, Twayne |
#6
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Hi Twayne,
have you tried using fields in your header like this {={NumPages}-{Page}+1} This should give the desired numbering. Regards, Markus |
#7
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I hit the submit button to fast. After I re-read the original post I noticed that I did not get the question. So please disregard my post. Thank you. Markus |
#8
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In ,
Markus4 typed: Markus4;457117 Wrote: Hi Twayne, have you tried using fields in your header like this {={NUMPAGES}-{PAGE}+1} This should give the desired numbering. Regards, Markus Sorry: I hit the submit button to fast. After I re-read the original post I noticed that I did not get the question. So please disregard my post. Thank you. Markus No problem; it's an old question anyway and somewhere along the line shows it was solved in the title line. Thanks for the time though. -- -- Life is the only real counselor; wisdom unfiltered through personal experience does not become a part of the moral tissue. |
#9
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Posted to microsoft.public.word.formatting.longdocs
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In ,
Markus4 typed: Markus4;457117 Wrote: Hi Twayne, have you tried using fields in your header like this {={NUMPAGES}-{PAGE}+1} This should give the desired numbering. Regards, Markus Sorry: I hit the submit button to fast. After I re-read the original post I noticed that I did not get the question. So please disregard my post. Thank you. Markus No problem; it's an old question anyway and somewhere along the line shows it was solved in the title line. Thanks for the time though. -- -- Life is the only real counselor; wisdom unfiltered through personal experience does not become a part of the moral tissue. |
#10
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vb.net pdf reverse page order is what you are trying to do is impossible, what you could try to do is show vb.net pdf reverse page orderwas that what you were trying?, if so, try something like this: http://www.rasteredge.com/how-to/vb-...ng/pdf-rotate/
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#11
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