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#1
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I asked this question a few days ago. I even got a reply in my email. But
when I click on the link in the reply, nothing happens. I am never actually taken to the question and I am unable to refind the question here on this forum. So, here goes again. I have been using the Shift-Alt-D short cut lately and supposed it would put in a date in my WORD document that is static. It does not. I discovered subsequently that the day changes to whatever today's date is when you reopen files. (like a day or two later) Is there a shortcut key that will allow me to put today's date quickly in a document and it not change subsequently? |
#2
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If you want a static date, it will be easier to type it in.
The date inserted by the Alt+Shift+D shortcut is a DATE field; after it has been added to a document what you can do is change it into a CREATEDATE field: Press Alt+F9 to show field codes. Your date will look similar to { DATE \@ "MM/d/yy" }. Change the DATE part to CREATEDATE. Press F9 to update, and then press Alt+F9 to hide field codes. Now, you'll see the creation date of the document. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Woody" wrote in message ... I asked this question a few days ago. I even got a reply in my email. But when I click on the link in the reply, nothing happens. I am never actually taken to the question and I am unable to refind the question here on this forum. So, here goes again. I have been using the Shift-Alt-D short cut lately and supposed it would put in a date in my WORD document that is static. It does not. I discovered subsequently that the day changes to whatever today's date is when you reopen files. (like a day or two later) Is there a shortcut key that will allow me to put today's date quickly in a document and it not change subsequently? |
#3
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Thank you for the clarification.
I suppose another way would be to create a macro that inserts the CreateDate field. Y/N? |
#4
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Yes, that would of course be possible. To get the date format you want, you
could record a macro when inserting the field manually. Then attach the resulting macro to a toolbar button (Word 97-2003) or to the Quick Access Toolbar (Word 2007). -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Woody" wrote in message ... Thank you for the clarification. I suppose another way would be to create a macro that inserts the CreateDate field. Y/N? |
#5
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Thank you. That was very helpful.
One other question please. I have been reading this message directly from your web site. But I want to switch to a news reader (Outlook Express). However, in msnews.microsoft.com , I do not see this forum listed. I would have guessed the account would have been something like Microsoft.public.word.general, but I don't see anything like that. |
#6
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You can also save the appropriate CREATEDATE field as an AutoText entry and
assign it to a toolbar button or keyboard shortcut. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Stefan Blom" wrote in message ... Yes, that would of course be possible. To get the date format you want, you could record a macro when inserting the field manually. Then attach the resulting macro to a toolbar button (Word 97-2003) or to the Quick Access Toolbar (Word 2007). -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Woody" wrote in message ... Thank you for the clarification. I suppose another way would be to create a macro that inserts the CreateDate field. Y/N? |
#7
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Woody wrote:
Thank you. That was very helpful. One other question please. I have been reading this message directly from your web site. But I want to switch to a news reader (Outlook Express). However, in msnews.microsoft.com , I do not see this forum listed. I would have guessed the account would have been something like Microsoft.public.word.general, but I don't see anything like that. Its real name is microsoft.public.word.docmanagement. -- 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. |
#8
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That would be much easier of course.
-- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... You can also save the appropriate CREATEDATE field as an AutoText entry and assign it to a toolbar button or keyboard shortcut. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Stefan Blom" wrote in message ... Yes, that would of course be possible. To get the date format you want, you could record a macro when inserting the field manually. Then attach the resulting macro to a toolbar button (Word 97-2003) or to the Quick Access Toolbar (Word 2007). -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Woody" wrote in message ... Thank you for the clarification. I suppose another way would be to create a macro that inserts the CreateDate field. Y/N? |
#9
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Glad I could help, but see also Suzanne's reply for an even easier solution.
-- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Woody" wrote in message ... Thank you. That was very helpful. One other question please. I have been reading this message directly from your web site. But I want to switch to a news reader (Outlook Express). However, in msnews.microsoft.com , I do not see this forum listed. I would have guessed the account would have been something like Microsoft.public.word.general, but I don't see anything like that. |
#10
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Press Alt+F9 to show field codes. Change the DATE part to CREATEDATE; this
changes the field into a CREATEDATE field which, as the name implies, shows the creation date of the file. Press F9 to update. Press Alt+F9 again to hide field codes. Note that if you want to add a (completely) static date, typing it in will be quicker. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Woody" wrote: I asked this question a few days ago. I even got a reply in my email. But when I click on the link in the reply, nothing happens. I am never actually taken to the question and I am unable to refind the question here on this forum. So, here goes again. I have been using the Shift-Alt-D short cut lately and supposed it would put in a date in my WORD document that is static. It does not. I discovered subsequently that the day changes to whatever today's date is when you reopen files. (like a day or two later) Is there a shortcut key that will allow me to put today's date quickly in a document and it not change subsequently? |
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