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#1
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Greetings--new user; first post!
I have a rather sophisticated feature I'm trying to do in Word, but don't know how to accomplish. I'm a technical writer and produce the user manuals for our company. One product has sixteen different variations of the same manual, 95% of which is the same with subtle differences peppered throughout the document. I have a new manager who has asked me to automate the structure of the document so we have one manual that can be constructed as any one of the sixteen variants on the fly. I don't know how to do this in Word. The idea is to manage updates only on one document rather than the way were managing updates now. Currently, one update has to be replicated sixteen times. This has a huge impact on our development time for documentation updates. My manager suggested Mail Merge, which looks useless for our use. The problem is, the changes could affect the header, footer, in some cases graphics, text within the body of the document, and this all could affect pagination. Does Word offer an advanced feature to manage content so one manual can actually be sixteen different manuals and a user can automate the way in which a manual content is constructed? I appreciate the help! -Paul |
#2
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Mail merge would certainly be one way of doing it.
To see how to handle the graphics, see the "Graphics from data base" item under the "Special merges" section of fellow MVP Cindy Meister's website at: http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindy...r/MergFram.htm Large blocks of text could be inserted from files in a similar way using IncludeText fields in place of IncludePicture fields. Minor phrase/word changes could be handled by having them directly in the data source. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP, originally posted via msnews.microsoft.com "premington" wrote in message ... Greetings--new user; first post! I have a rather sophisticated feature I'm trying to do in Word, but don't know how to accomplish. I'm a technical writer and produce the user manuals for our company. One product has sixteen different variations of the same manual, 95% of which is the same with subtle differences peppered throughout the document. I have a new manager who has asked me to automate the structure of the document so we have one manual that can be constructed as any one of the sixteen variants on the fly. I don't know how to do this in Word. The idea is to manage updates only on one document rather than the way were managing updates now. Currently, one update has to be replicated sixteen times. This has a huge impact on our development time for documentation updates. My manager suggested Mail Merge, which looks useless for our use. The problem is, the changes could affect the header, footer, in some cases graphics, text within the body of the document, and this all could affect pagination. Does Word offer an advanced feature to manage content so one manual can actually be sixteen different manuals and a user can automate the way in which a manual content is constructed? I appreciate the help! -Paul |
#3
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Hmmm... Well, I still don't see how Mail Merge can help in a way that saves
time. The grunt work to *maybe* make it work appears to be more work than just revising the documentation manually. I think I follow what Cindy's page references, but it doesn't address how to manage (in our case) 16 different manual trypes within the user manual and how a writer would select content for one manual type over another. It appears we would have to have some form of template file that would house all the various changes for all 16 manuals with graphics being pointed to a backend database, and then fields in the primary file pointing to content in the template file, which points to the graphic fields in the database file. OMG! This is a snaky nightmare! I'm clueless how to select content for one manual flavor over the 15 other varietals. None of this addresses how to deal with automated figure references and cross references, changes to index entries, and pagination. I'm very skeptical whether Word can actually do this. Based on the lack of responses I'm getting in this and other forums, I'm quickly realizing Word isn't designed for this level of sophistication in terms of document automation. If anyone feels I'm wrong, please chime in! I'm really eager to find a solution and striking out on all tries. -Paul "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote: Mail merge would certainly be one way of doing it. To see how to handle the graphics, see the "Graphics from data base" item under the "Special merges" section of fellow MVP Cindy Meister's website at: http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindy...r/MergFram.htm Large blocks of text could be inserted from files in a similar way using IncludeText fields in place of IncludePicture fields. Minor phrase/word changes could be handled by having them directly in the data source. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP, originally posted via msnews.microsoft.com "premington" wrote in message ... Greetings--new user; first post! I have a rather sophisticated feature I'm trying to do in Word, but don't know how to accomplish. I'm a technical writer and produce the user manuals for our company. One product has sixteen different variations of the same manual, 95% of which is the same with subtle differences peppered throughout the document. I have a new manager who has asked me to automate the structure of the document so we have one manual that can be constructed as any one of the sixteen variants on the fly. I don't know how to do this in Word. The idea is to manage updates only on one document rather than the way were managing updates now. Currently, one update has to be replicated sixteen times. This has a huge impact on our development time for documentation updates. My manager suggested Mail Merge, which looks useless for our use. The problem is, the changes could affect the header, footer, in some cases graphics, text within the body of the document, and this all could affect pagination. Does Word offer an advanced feature to manage content so one manual can actually be sixteen different manuals and a user can automate the way in which a manual content is constructed? I appreciate the help! -Paul . |
#4
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Hmmm... Well, I still don't see how Mail Merge can help in a way that saves
time. The grunt work to *maybe* make it work appears to be more work than just revising the documentation manually. I think I follow what Cindy's page references, but it doesn't address how to manage (in our case) 16 different manual trypes within the user manual and how a writer would select content for one manual type over another. It appears we would have to have some form of template file that would house all the various changes for all 16 manuals with graphics being pointed to a backend database, and then fields in the primary file pointing to content in the template file, which points to the graphic fields in the database file. OMG! This is a snaky nightmare! I'm clueless how to select content for one manual flavor over the 15 other varietals. None of this addresses how to deal with automated figure references and cross references, changes to index entries, and pagination. I'm very skeptical whether Word can actually do this. Based on the lack of responses I'm getting in this and other forums, I'm quickly realizing Word isn't designed for this level of sophistication in terms of document automation. If anyone feels I'm wrong, please chime in! I'm really eager to find a solution and striking out on all tries. -Paul "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote: Mail merge would certainly be one way of doing it. To see how to handle the graphics, see the "Graphics from data base" item under the "Special merges" section of fellow MVP Cindy Meister's website at: http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindy...r/MergFram.htm Large blocks of text could be inserted from files in a similar way using IncludeText fields in place of IncludePicture fields. Minor phrase/word changes could be handled by having them directly in the data source. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP, originally posted via msnews.microsoft.com "premington" wrote in message ... Greetings--new user; first post! I have a rather sophisticated feature I'm trying to do in Word, but don't know how to accomplish. I'm a technical writer and produce the user manuals for our company. One product has sixteen different variations of the same manual, 95% of which is the same with subtle differences peppered throughout the document. I have a new manager who has asked me to automate the structure of the document so we have one manual that can be constructed as any one of the sixteen variants on the fly. I don't know how to do this in Word. The idea is to manage updates only on one document rather than the way were managing updates now. Currently, one update has to be replicated sixteen times. This has a huge impact on our development time for documentation updates. My manager suggested Mail Merge, which looks useless for our use. The problem is, the changes could affect the header, footer, in some cases graphics, text within the body of the document, and this all could affect pagination. Does Word offer an advanced feature to manage content so one manual can actually be sixteen different manuals and a user can automate the way in which a manual content is constructed? I appreciate the help! -Paul . |
#5
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I would recommend saving different versions of the documentation, for each of the sixteen variants. As you may have noticed, the Version option in Word 2003 (where you could save, and Word would track, different versions of a document) has been removed from Word 2007. That being said, Mr. Graham Mayor has developed an add-in to restore that functionality to Word. See: http://www.gmayor.com/SaveVersionsAdd-in.htm .
While this may not be the least labor-intensive nor the simplest solution, saving one master document and then manually producing revisions for sixteen new versions every time an update occurs is not something I would wish to tackle, either. Michael Tardie Quote:
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#6
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![]() Mail merge would certainly be one way of doing it. To see how to handle the graphics, see the "Graphics from data base" item under the "Special merges" section of fellow MVP Cindy Meister's website at: http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindy...r/MergFram.htm Large blocks of text could be inserted from files in a similar way using IncludeText fields in place of IncludePicture fields. Minor phrase/word changes could be handled by having them directly in the data source. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP, originally posted via msnews.microsoft.com "premington" wrote in message ... Greetings--new user; first post! I have a rather sophisticated feature I'm trying to do in Word, but don't know how to accomplish. I'm a technical writer and produce the user manuals for our company. One product has sixteen different variations of the same manual, 95% of which is the same with subtle differences peppered throughout the document. I have a new manager who has asked me to automate the structure of the document so we have one manual that can be constructed as any one of the sixteen variants on the fly. I don't know how to do this in Word. The idea is to manage updates only on one document rather than the way were managing updates now. Currently, one update has to be replicated sixteen times. This has a huge impact on our development time for documentation updates. My manager suggested Mail Merge, which looks useless for our use. The problem is, the changes could affect the header, footer, in some cases graphics, text within the body of the document, and this all could affect pagination. Does Word offer an advanced feature to manage content so one manual can actually be sixteen different manuals and a user can automate the way in which a manual content is constructed? I appreciate the help! -Paul |
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