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#1
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I am using Word as a mega-bucket for all my notes. Related notes are
scattered all over this document. I want to be able to find all instances of a text string, and display all these (and the sentence/paragraph they are in) in one place--probably a scrollable window so I can quickly find the relevant "note". The current Find All is way too tedious to do this as I can only see one instance at a time. Ideally, I would like the instances appearing in the separate window to hyperlink to their source location, so I can quickly see AND get to the relevant note. Is there something that does this, or something close? Thanks Tecsi |
#2
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Tecsi wrote:
I am using Word as a mega-bucket for all my notes. Related notes are scattered all over this document. I want to be able to find all instances of a text string, and display all these (and the sentence/paragraph they are in) in one place--probably a scrollable window so I can quickly find the relevant "note". The current Find All is way too tedious to do this as I can only see one instance at a time. Ideally, I would like the instances appearing in the separate window to hyperlink to their source location, so I can quickly see AND get to the relevant note. Is there something that does this, or something close? Thanks Tecsi There is nothing built into Word that you can simply "turn on". It would be possible to write a macro that creates a separate document to hold the scrolling list, does the search, copies the paragraph containing each "hit" into the other document, and attaches a hyperlink to the original passage. While it's possible, it wouldn't be particularly user-friendly. Let me suggest instead that you should look at OneNote, a separate application that's built to do pretty much what you asked for. See http://office.microsoft.com/onenote. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org |
#3
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Hi Tecsi,
The best idea I can come up with, that doesn't involve a lot of programming, would be to use the Document Map for this. 1. Set up a style with an "outline level" of 1 2. Make sure your document doesn't otherwise use outline levels 3. With Find/Replace, search the term, and in the Replace section, choose the style. this should apply the style to all the found instances 4. Display the Document Map: all instaces of the style should appear (with any luck) 5. To get rid of the list (in order to make a new one, for example), Find all instances of the style and, on the Replace side, remove all settings (or choose the Normal style) Note that this really rather a "dirty" approach, since it applies a style in the document with no regard to the document formatting, otherwise. So it's not certain it would be appropriate. But if you're only using the document as a "notes bucket", the formatting may not be that relevant. I am using Word as a mega-bucket for all my notes. Related notes are scattered all over this document. I want to be able to find all instances of a text string, and display all these (and the sentence/paragraph they are in) in one place--probably a scrollable window so I can quickly find the relevant "note". The current Find All is way too tedious to do this as I can only see one instance at a time. Ideally, I would like the instances appearing in the separate window to hyperlink to their source location, so I can quickly see AND get to the relevant note. Is there something that does this, or something close? Cindy Meister INTER-Solutions, Switzerland http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindymeister (last update Jun 8 2004) http://www.word.mvps.org This reply is posted in the Newsgroup; please post any follow question or reply in the newsgroup and not by e-mail :-) |
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