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#1
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I am using Word 2003. I have cross-references in a document (Ref fields)
that I created either by inserting Table of Contents and Table of Figures, or by using Insert-Reference-Cross-Reference. In the Word doc, I can control whether the fields appear shaded or not. But, what I really want is for these Ref fields to appear in blue underlined text to indicate that they are hyperlinks that the reader can follow. Most readers will read the document in pdf format. I am using RoboHelp to convert the doc to pdf, which converts all the hyperlinks. Right now, the pdf file includes no visual cue that text is a link to follow. In Word, I've even tried applying the hyperlink character style to the text. The style shows as applied, but the text still doesn't appear blue and underlined. THanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Bonnie B |
#2
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Well, this is a long way around, but it appears to work. I suggest you test
it on a COPY. Toggle Field Codes (alt-F9) so that the cross-references show up as {REF some number} Go to Find and Replace. Put ^19 REF in the Find field. Put the cursor in the Replace field, click More to expand the dialog, and use the Format menu at the bottom of the dialog to format the empty Replace box as you want the cross-references to look. Replace All. Toggle Field Codes. Post back with results. On 5/23/05 3:53 PM, "BonnieB" wrote: I am using Word 2003. I have cross-references in a document (Ref fields) that I created either by inserting Table of Contents and Table of Figures, or by using Insert-Reference-Cross-Reference. In the Word doc, I can control whether the fields appear shaded or not. But, what I really want is for these Ref fields to appear in blue underlined text to indicate that they are hyperlinks that the reader can follow. Most readers will read the document in pdf format. I am using RoboHelp to convert the doc to pdf, which converts all the hyperlinks. Right now, the pdf file includes no visual cue that text is a link to follow. In Word, I've even tried applying the hyperlink character style to the text. The style shows as applied, but the text still doesn't appear blue and underlined. THanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Daiya Mitchell, MVP Mac/Word Word FAQ: http://www.word.mvps.org/ MacWord Tips: http://www.word.mvps.org/MacWordNew/ What's an MVP? A volunteer! Read the FAQ: http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ |
#3
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Daiya,
First, thanks for the fast response. Your workaround fixed all but my very first Ref field, which is a cross-reference to Figure 1. All the other figures and other types of cross references changed to the formatting I specified. What does ^19 represent? I'm trying to determine how my Figure 1 cross-ref differs from the others. Also, will this workaround also work to change the formatting for the links to the Table of Contents and Table of Figures fields that Word inserts? -- Bonnie B "Daiya Mitchell" wrote: Well, this is a long way around, but it appears to work. I suggest you test it on a COPY. Toggle Field Codes (alt-F9) so that the cross-references show up as {REF some number} Go to Find and Replace. Put ^19 REF in the Find field. Put the cursor in the Replace field, click More to expand the dialog, and use the Format menu at the bottom of the dialog to format the empty Replace box as you want the cross-references to look. Replace All. Toggle Field Codes. Post back with results. On 5/23/05 3:53 PM, "BonnieB" wrote: I am using Word 2003. I have cross-references in a document (Ref fields) that I created either by inserting Table of Contents and Table of Figures, or by using Insert-Reference-Cross-Reference. In the Word doc, I can control whether the fields appear shaded or not. But, what I really want is for these Ref fields to appear in blue underlined text to indicate that they are hyperlinks that the reader can follow. Most readers will read the document in pdf format. I am using RoboHelp to convert the doc to pdf, which converts all the hyperlinks. Right now, the pdf file includes no visual cue that text is a link to follow. In Word, I've even tried applying the hyperlink character style to the text. The style shows as applied, but the text still doesn't appear blue and underlined. THanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Daiya Mitchell, MVP Mac/Word Word FAQ: http://www.word.mvps.org/ MacWord Tips: http://www.word.mvps.org/MacWordNew/ What's an MVP? A volunteer! Read the FAQ: http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ |
#4
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The workaround works like a charm on all my in-text cross-references.
I figured out that ^19 is the code for a curly brace. And, I tried looking for ^19 TOC to convert the table of contents to the hyperlink formatting. It applies the formatting to the leader lines and the page numbers but not to the heading names of figures in the Table of Figures. Is there a way to have those appear as hyperlinks? I suppose I could just include text that tells the reader than the TOC includes hyperlinks. -- Bonnie B "Daiya Mitchell" wrote: Well, this is a long way around, but it appears to work. I suggest you test it on a COPY. Toggle Field Codes (alt-F9) so that the cross-references show up as {REF some number} Go to Find and Replace. Put ^19 REF in the Find field. Put the cursor in the Replace field, click More to expand the dialog, and use the Format menu at the bottom of the dialog to format the empty Replace box as you want the cross-references to look. Replace All. Toggle Field Codes. Post back with results. On 5/23/05 3:53 PM, "BonnieB" wrote: I am using Word 2003. I have cross-references in a document (Ref fields) that I created either by inserting Table of Contents and Table of Figures, or by using Insert-Reference-Cross-Reference. In the Word doc, I can control whether the fields appear shaded or not. But, what I really want is for these Ref fields to appear in blue underlined text to indicate that they are hyperlinks that the reader can follow. Most readers will read the document in pdf format. I am using RoboHelp to convert the doc to pdf, which converts all the hyperlinks. Right now, the pdf file includes no visual cue that text is a link to follow. In Word, I've even tried applying the hyperlink character style to the text. The style shows as applied, but the text still doesn't appear blue and underlined. THanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Daiya Mitchell, MVP Mac/Word Word FAQ: http://www.word.mvps.org/ MacWord Tips: http://www.word.mvps.org/MacWordNew/ What's an MVP? A volunteer! Read the FAQ: http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ |
#5
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Well, this is an old thread that I found by searching, but I wonder if anyone
had any new information on the subject. The workaround is not ideal. What I'm wondering is why the character formatting doesn't show up in the first place. For example, in a Table of Contents, the page numbers are just fields, but the headings are fields + formatted with the Hyperlink character style (use Reveal Formatting to see this). But they're not blue underlined. Why the %@#$* not? "BonnieB" wrote: The workaround works like a charm on all my in-text cross-references. I figured out that ^19 is the code for a curly brace. And, I tried looking for ^19 TOC to convert the table of contents to the hyperlink formatting. It applies the formatting to the leader lines and the page numbers but not to the heading names of figures in the Table of Figures. Is there a way to have those appear as hyperlinks? I suppose I could just include text that tells the reader than the TOC includes hyperlinks. -- Bonnie B "Daiya Mitchell" wrote: Well, this is a long way around, but it appears to work. I suggest you test it on a COPY. Toggle Field Codes (alt-F9) so that the cross-references show up as {REF some number} Go to Find and Replace. Put ^19 REF in the Find field. Put the cursor in the Replace field, click More to expand the dialog, and use the Format menu at the bottom of the dialog to format the empty Replace box as you want the cross-references to look. Replace All. Toggle Field Codes. Post back with results. On 5/23/05 3:53 PM, "BonnieB" wrote: I am using Word 2003. I have cross-references in a document (Ref fields) that I created either by inserting Table of Contents and Table of Figures, or by using Insert-Reference-Cross-Reference. In the Word doc, I can control whether the fields appear shaded or not. But, what I really want is for these Ref fields to appear in blue underlined text to indicate that they are hyperlinks that the reader can follow. Most readers will read the document in pdf format. I am using RoboHelp to convert the doc to pdf, which converts all the hyperlinks. Right now, the pdf file includes no visual cue that text is a link to follow. In Word, I've even tried applying the hyperlink character style to the text. The style shows as applied, but the text still doesn't appear blue and underlined. THanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Daiya Mitchell, MVP Mac/Word Word FAQ: http://www.word.mvps.org/ MacWord Tips: http://www.word.mvps.org/MacWordNew/ What's an MVP? A volunteer! Read the FAQ: http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ |
#6
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The formatting in a Table of Contents is controlled by TOC styles. You
could redefine TOC1, TOC2, TOC3, etc, to be blue and hyperlinked, I suppose. Test on a COPY of your doc. You might want to read about controlling how the TOC looks, first--see he TOC Tips and Tricks http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/TOCTips.htm stman wrote: Well, this is an old thread that I found by searching, but I wonder if anyone had any new information on the subject. The workaround is not ideal. What I'm wondering is why the character formatting doesn't show up in the first place. For example, in a Table of Contents, the page numbers are just fields, but the headings are fields + formatted with the Hyperlink character style (use Reveal Formatting to see this). But they're not blue underlined. Why the %@#$* not? "BonnieB" wrote: The workaround works like a charm on all my in-text cross-references. I figured out that ^19 is the code for a curly brace. And, I tried looking for ^19 TOC to convert the table of contents to the hyperlink formatting. It applies the formatting to the leader lines and the page numbers but not to the heading names of figures in the Table of Figures. Is there a way to have those appear as hyperlinks? I suppose I could just include text that tells the reader than the TOC includes hyperlinks. -- Bonnie B "Daiya Mitchell" wrote: Well, this is a long way around, but it appears to work. I suggest you test it on a COPY. Toggle Field Codes (alt-F9) so that the cross-references show up as {REF some number} Go to Find and Replace. Put ^19 REF in the Find field. Put the cursor in the Replace field, click More to expand the dialog, and use the Format menu at the bottom of the dialog to format the empty Replace box as you want the cross-references to look. Replace All. Toggle Field Codes. Post back with results. On 5/23/05 3:53 PM, "BonnieB" wrote: I am using Word 2003. I have cross-references in a document (Ref fields) that I created either by inserting Table of Contents and Table of Figures, or by using Insert-Reference-Cross-Reference. In the Word doc, I can control whether the fields appear shaded or not. But, what I really want is for these Ref fields to appear in blue underlined text to indicate that they are hyperlinks that the reader can follow. Most readers will read the document in pdf format. I am using RoboHelp to convert the doc to pdf, which converts all the hyperlinks. Right now, the pdf file includes no visual cue that text is a link to follow. In Word, I've even tried applying the hyperlink character style to the text. The style shows as applied, but the text still doesn't appear blue and underlined. THanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Daiya Mitchell, MVP Mac/Word Word FAQ: http://www.word.mvps.org/ MacWord Tips: http://www.word.mvps.org/MacWordNew/ What's an MVP? A volunteer! Read the FAQ: http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ |
#7
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Because Word suppresses the display/printing of the Hyperlink character
style for TOCs and cross-references in documents it assumes you will be printing. The presence of a TOC with page numbers suggests a printed document. Most people don't want these hyperlinks to be blue and underlined in a printed document. This is one of those cases where MS made a decision based on majority user demand, the results of which do not suit all users. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "stman" wrote in message ... Well, this is an old thread that I found by searching, but I wonder if anyone had any new information on the subject. The workaround is not ideal. What I'm wondering is why the character formatting doesn't show up in the first place. For example, in a Table of Contents, the page numbers are just fields, but the headings are fields + formatted with the Hyperlink character style (use Reveal Formatting to see this). But they're not blue underlined. Why the %@#$* not? "BonnieB" wrote: The workaround works like a charm on all my in-text cross-references. I figured out that ^19 is the code for a curly brace. And, I tried looking for ^19 TOC to convert the table of contents to the hyperlink formatting. It applies the formatting to the leader lines and the page numbers but not to the heading names of figures in the Table of Figures. Is there a way to have those appear as hyperlinks? I suppose I could just include text that tells the reader than the TOC includes hyperlinks. -- Bonnie B "Daiya Mitchell" wrote: Well, this is a long way around, but it appears to work. I suggest you test it on a COPY. Toggle Field Codes (alt-F9) so that the cross-references show up as {REF some number} Go to Find and Replace. Put ^19 REF in the Find field. Put the cursor in the Replace field, click More to expand the dialog, and use the Format menu at the bottom of the dialog to format the empty Replace box as you want the cross-references to look. Replace All. Toggle Field Codes. Post back with results. On 5/23/05 3:53 PM, "BonnieB" wrote: I am using Word 2003. I have cross-references in a document (Ref fields) that I created either by inserting Table of Contents and Table of Figures, or by using Insert-Reference-Cross-Reference. In the Word doc, I can control whether the fields appear shaded or not. But, what I really want is for these Ref fields to appear in blue underlined text to indicate that they are hyperlinks that the reader can follow. Most readers will read the document in pdf format. I am using RoboHelp to convert the doc to pdf, which converts all the hyperlinks. Right now, the pdf file includes no visual cue that text is a link to follow. In Word, I've even tried applying the hyperlink character style to the text. The style shows as applied, but the text still doesn't appear blue and underlined. THanks in advance for any help you can provide. -- Daiya Mitchell, MVP Mac/Word Word FAQ: http://www.word.mvps.org/ MacWord Tips: http://www.word.mvps.org/MacWordNew/ What's an MVP? A volunteer! Read the FAQ: http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ |
#8
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Yes, that makes sense. So I can create my own hyperlink character style and
apply it to individual cross references in the document. Also read your TOC information mentioned in the previous post, and I want to thank you for writing that very complete and HELPFUL article. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Because Word suppresses the display/printing of the Hyperlink character style for TOCs and cross-references in documents it assumes you will be printing. The presence of a TOC with page numbers suggests a printed document. Most people don't want these hyperlinks to be blue and underlined in a printed document. This is one of those cases where MS made a decision based on majority user demand, the results of which do not suit all users. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
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