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#1
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I'm using Word 2003 on Windows XP to produce a set of small user guides for a
client. I created a template and am "knocking off" one guide at a time. I learned yesterday that my client needs to include several of these user guides in a sprawling training manual that she maintains. As I complete more guides and then make updates, she'll need to keep the training manual in sync with the user guides. Her training manual uses Normal.dot and there is overlap in styles between her template and mine (Heading 1/2/3, List Bullet, List Number 1/2, and possibly a couple others). So far, my content looks awful when I use {includetext} to pull it into her training manual. (I'm actually including -- thanks to advice in this forum -- bookmarks rather than the entire document, to eliminate front matter). Is there any way to {includetext} documents/bookmarks into a target document *without* having the included content take on the styles of the target document? If it isn't possible, can anyone suggest a different way to approach this problem? Thank you very much. Kevin McDonough |
#2
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See the Include text tutorial at http://addbalance.com to see how styles
interact. -- Charles Kenyon Word New User FAQ & Web Directory: http://addbalance.com/word Intermediate User's Guide to Microsoft Word (supplemented version of Microsoft's Legal Users' Guide) http://addbalance.com/usersguide See also the MVP FAQ: http://www.mvps.org/word which is awesome! --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- This message is posted to a newsgroup. Please post replies and questions to the newsgroup so that others can learn from my ignorance and your wisdom. "boswrit" wrote in message ... I'm using Word 2003 on Windows XP to produce a set of small user guides for a client. I created a template and am "knocking off" one guide at a time. I learned yesterday that my client needs to include several of these user guides in a sprawling training manual that she maintains. As I complete more guides and then make updates, she'll need to keep the training manual in sync with the user guides. Her training manual uses Normal.dot and there is overlap in styles between her template and mine (Heading 1/2/3, List Bullet, List Number 1/2, and possibly a couple others). So far, my content looks awful when I use {includetext} to pull it into her training manual. (I'm actually including -- thanks to advice in this forum -- bookmarks rather than the entire document, to eliminate front matter). Is there any way to {includetext} documents/bookmarks into a target document *without* having the included content take on the styles of the target document? If it isn't possible, can anyone suggest a different way to approach this problem? Thank you very much. Kevin McDonough |
#3
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Thank you, Charles.
"Charles Kenyon" wrote: See the Include text tutorial at http://addbalance.com to see how styles interact. -- Charles Kenyon Word New User FAQ & Web Directory: http://addbalance.com/word Intermediate User's Guide to Microsoft Word (supplemented version of Microsoft's Legal Users' Guide) http://addbalance.com/usersguide See also the MVP FAQ: http://www.mvps.org/word which is awesome! --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- This message is posted to a newsgroup. Please post replies and questions to the newsgroup so that others can learn from my ignorance and your wisdom. "boswrit" wrote in message ... I'm using Word 2003 on Windows XP to produce a set of small user guides for a client. I created a template and am "knocking off" one guide at a time. I learned yesterday that my client needs to include several of these user guides in a sprawling training manual that she maintains. As I complete more guides and then make updates, she'll need to keep the training manual in sync with the user guides. Her training manual uses Normal.dot and there is overlap in styles between her template and mine (Heading 1/2/3, List Bullet, List Number 1/2, and possibly a couple others). So far, my content looks awful when I use {includetext} to pull it into her training manual. (I'm actually including -- thanks to advice in this forum -- bookmarks rather than the entire document, to eliminate front matter). Is there any way to {includetext} documents/bookmarks into a target document *without* having the included content take on the styles of the target document? If it isn't possible, can anyone suggest a different way to approach this problem? Thank you very much. Kevin McDonough |
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