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#1
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I am seeking your opinion and direction. I just lost part of a very
large word document; over 1 GB in size. I sometimes drive thousands of miles to research something. I scan all documents, photograph documents and the location; then insert the JPG image files into a Word document, where the JPG image files are explained, questions asked, and assumptions made. There can many chapters of 500 MB file size; some chapters might be as small as 50 MB, or maybe 25 MB. I regularly study several subjects (books) at one time; each book with many chapters. Occasionally, a chapter in one book needs to be added to another book. Considering each chapters'' size, and considering the books overall size, how should I write and store these documents to make the possibility of file loose and corruption to a minimum? In another project, I collect HTML, txt, JPG, PDF and other file types that I would like to put them into a Word "book" with references and notes. Is there a way to call the file to be printed from word, and allow the header and footer to be on each page printed on the "Called Files?" Can the "Called Files" be an "exhibit" in Word; where the printing format selected by the originator be maintained? Thanks. Thanks |
#2
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It sounds to me like you might be using a camera that produces huge images.
Try reducing the file sizes of your images BEFORE you place them into Word. A program like www.irfanview.com has a batch converter that'll compress your images for you. I can't respond about the rest...Word simply isn't quite that intelligent, though some VBA could be written that would, for instance...on print of your document, print the rest of the items in a given folder. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com wrote in message ps.com... I am seeking your opinion and direction. I just lost part of a very large word document; over 1 GB in size. I sometimes drive thousands of miles to research something. I scan all documents, photograph documents and the location; then insert the JPG image files into a Word document, where the JPG image files are explained, questions asked, and assumptions made. There can many chapters of 500 MB file size; some chapters might be as small as 50 MB, or maybe 25 MB. I regularly study several subjects (books) at one time; each book with many chapters. Occasionally, a chapter in one book needs to be added to another book. Considering each chapters'' size, and considering the books overall size, how should I write and store these documents to make the possibility of file loose and corruption to a minimum? In another project, I collect HTML, txt, JPG, PDF and other file types that I would like to put them into a Word "book" with references and notes. Is there a way to call the file to be printed from word, and allow the header and footer to be on each page printed on the "Called Files?" Can the "Called Files" be an "exhibit" in Word; where the printing format selected by the originator be maintained? Thanks. Thanks |
#3
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Word is a simple text processor in a Windows wrapper. It handles only WMF
or EMF graphics in "native" mode. Other GFX are not well handled, and bloat files out of any reasonable aize. It also sounds as if you may be using a "Master Document". This is universally guaranteed to cause a complete losss of a document. You MUST create chapters as individual files. You can join them into a printable/searchable book with Acrobat or another PDF creator. Larry Randall " wrote: I am seeking your opinion and direction. I just lost part of a very large word document; over 1 GB in size. I sometimes drive thousands of miles to research something. I scan all documents, photograph documents and the location; then insert the JPG image files into a Word document, where the JPG image files are explained, questions asked, and assumptions made. There can many chapters of 500 MB file size; some chapters might be as small as 50 MB, or maybe 25 MB. I regularly study several subjects (books) at one time; each book with many chapters. Occasionally, a chapter in one book needs to be added to another book. Considering each chapters'' size, and considering the books overall size, how should I write and store these documents to make the possibility of file loose and corruption to a minimum? In another project, I collect HTML, txt, JPG, PDF and other file types that I would like to put them into a Word "book" with references and notes. Is there a way to call the file to be printed from word, and allow the header and footer to be on each page printed on the "Called Files?" Can the "Called Files" be an "exhibit" in Word; where the printing format selected by the originator be maintained? Thanks. Thanks |
#4
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Hello Anne Troy,
Thank you for your response. I have several digital cameras and scanning devices, along with several software packages to handle image files and sizes. I am not concerned with the images; in fact, the images are the best part of my reports. I am really trying to figure the best way to create and handle large Word documents with Excel spreadsheets, lots of JPG images files, occasionally HTML files and anything else that needs to be shown and explained in these reports. Anne Troy wrote: It sounds to me like you might be using a camera that produces huge images. Try reducing the file sizes of your images BEFORE you place them into Word. A program like www.irfanview.com has a batch converter that'll compress your images for you. I can't respond about the rest...Word simply isn't quite that intelligent, though some VBA could be written that would, for instance...on print of your document, print the rest of the items in a given folder. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com wrote in message ps.com... I am seeking your opinion and direction. I just lost part of a very large word document; over 1 GB in size. I sometimes drive thousands of miles to research something. I scan all documents, photograph documents and the location; then insert the JPG image files into a Word document, where the JPG image files are explained, questions asked, and assumptions made. There can many chapters of 500 MB file size; some chapters might be as small as 50 MB, or maybe 25 MB. I regularly study several subjects (books) at one time; each book with many chapters. Occasionally, a chapter in one book needs to be added to another book. Considering each chapters'' size, and considering the books overall size, how should I write and store these documents to make the possibility of file loose and corruption to a minimum? In another project, I collect HTML, txt, JPG, PDF and other file types that I would like to put them into a Word "book" with references and notes. Is there a way to call the file to be printed from word, and allow the header and footer to be on each page printed on the "Called Files?" Can the "Called Files" be an "exhibit" in Word; where the printing format selected by the originator be maintained? Thanks. Thanks |
#5
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Hello Anne Troy,
Thank you for your response. I have several digital cameras and scanning devices, along with several software packages to handle image files and sizes. I am not concerned with the images; in fact, the images are the best part of my reports. I am really trying to figure the best way to create and handle large Word documents with Excel spreadsheets, lots of JPG images files, occasionally HTML files and anything else that needs to be shown and explained in these reports. Anne Troy wrote: It sounds to me like you might be using a camera that produces huge images. Try reducing the file sizes of your images BEFORE you place them into Word. A program like www.irfanview.com has a batch converter that'll compress your images for you. I can't respond about the rest...Word simply isn't quite that intelligent, though some VBA could be written that would, for instance...on print of your document, print the rest of the items in a given folder. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com wrote in message ps.com... I am seeking your opinion and direction. I just lost part of a very large word document; over 1 GB in size. I sometimes drive thousands of miles to research something. I scan all documents, photograph documents and the location; then insert the JPG image files into a Word document, where the JPG image files are explained, questions asked, and assumptions made. There can many chapters of 500 MB file size; some chapters might be as small as 50 MB, or maybe 25 MB. I regularly study several subjects (books) at one time; each book with many chapters. Occasionally, a chapter in one book needs to be added to another book. Considering each chapters'' size, and considering the books overall size, how should I write and store these documents to make the possibility of file loose and corruption to a minimum? In another project, I collect HTML, txt, JPG, PDF and other file types that I would like to put them into a Word "book" with references and notes. Is there a way to call the file to be printed from word, and allow the header and footer to be on each page printed on the "Called Files?" Can the "Called Files" be an "exhibit" in Word; where the printing format selected by the originator be maintained? Thanks. Thanks |
#6
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Sorry... that's what I'm trying to say. Your Word docs are likely bloating
due to the images (and especially images you crop and/or resize AFTER you put them into Word). Text doesn't make big Word files, so I assume it's the images... I have NEVER heard of ANY Word file being "1GB in size", and I have been working with huge files in Word for 10 years. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com wrote in message oups.com... Hello Anne Troy, Thank you for your response. I have several digital cameras and scanning devices, along with several software packages to handle image files and sizes. I am not concerned with the images; in fact, the images are the best part of my reports. I am really trying to figure the best way to create and handle large Word documents with Excel spreadsheets, lots of JPG images files, occasionally HTML files and anything else that needs to be shown and explained in these reports. Anne Troy wrote: It sounds to me like you might be using a camera that produces huge images. Try reducing the file sizes of your images BEFORE you place them into Word. A program like www.irfanview.com has a batch converter that'll compress your images for you. I can't respond about the rest...Word simply isn't quite that intelligent, though some VBA could be written that would, for instance...on print of your document, print the rest of the items in a given folder. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com wrote in message ps.com... I am seeking your opinion and direction. I just lost part of a very large word document; over 1 GB in size. I sometimes drive thousands of miles to research something. I scan all documents, photograph documents and the location; then insert the JPG image files into a Word document, where the JPG image files are explained, questions asked, and assumptions made. There can many chapters of 500 MB file size; some chapters might be as small as 50 MB, or maybe 25 MB. I regularly study several subjects (books) at one time; each book with many chapters. Occasionally, a chapter in one book needs to be added to another book. Considering each chapters'' size, and considering the books overall size, how should I write and store these documents to make the possibility of file loose and corruption to a minimum? In another project, I collect HTML, txt, JPG, PDF and other file types that I would like to put them into a Word "book" with references and notes. Is there a way to call the file to be printed from word, and allow the header and footer to be on each page printed on the "Called Files?" Can the "Called Files" be an "exhibit" in Word; where the printing format selected by the originator be maintained? Thanks. Thanks |
#7
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I would like to use a "Master Document" to call document files to be
printed, without having to be concerned about the called document, its originating software, its file, its file format and/or its author. Some of my information is pulled from the internet, and formatting this information is always a challenge. It seems that your advice is to take all outputs/printouts though Acrobat, save the files, then call them from a "master document" in an Acrobat document, with all the chapters in the same directory/folder. This approach allows PDF files by others to be added to my reports with less trouble. Do you know if the Acrobat "master document" headers and footers can be printed on the called PDF files that are to be the different chapters? Thank you. |
#8
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I agree. I have never had or seen a Word document this big. While the
size could be or is a problem, the corrupted fill with lost information and wasted time is the bigger problem. I was probably to impatient with the large file, and did not let Word handle the "back office" functions correctly before I did something stupid, and probably corrupted the file by my actions. I am trying to solve the printing and distribution of several hundred pages of 'report." |
#9
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I don't know who you're responding to, but I never mentioned any kind of
"master PDF"; I've never heard of such a thing, and I don't know anyone who actually recommends the "master document" feature in Word, either--it just plain sucks. What I said is that some VBA (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_...r_Applications for a definition) could be produced that would print ALL the files in a given folder, regardless of their file type, but there is no "neat" solution to your dilemma. You either need to put everything into one application or print them separately. If I had to suggest ONE application, then it would probably be Acrobat because you could print all the files to PDF and then use Acrobat (not the reader, mind you, but the full-blown application that's a mere $450, see http://store.adobe.com/store/product...=catAcrobatPro) and combine them all into one PDF, but they're not easily editable. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com wrote in message ups.com... I would like to use a "Master Document" to call document files to be printed, without having to be concerned about the called document, its originating software, its file, its file format and/or its author. Some of my information is pulled from the internet, and formatting this information is always a challenge. It seems that your advice is to take all outputs/printouts though Acrobat, save the files, then call them from a "master document" in an Acrobat document, with all the chapters in the same directory/folder. This approach allows PDF files by others to be added to my reports with less trouble. Do you know if the Acrobat "master document" headers and footers can be printed on the called PDF files that are to be the different chapters? Thank you. |
#10
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Hi,
Instead of inserting the actual images into your Word document, I'd recommend consideration of only inserting links to them. You'd usually do this via Insert|Picture|From File and, having selected the file, using the 'Insert' drop-down to select 'Link to File'. For more information on this, check out 'Insert a picture from another file' and the 'INCLUDEPICTURE' field in Word's help file. Likewise if you've got multiple chapters in separate documents - you can have one document that consolidates the lot via linking. For more information on this, check out the 'INCLUDETEXT' field in Word's help file. This allows you to avoid using Word's 'master document' feature (I use the term advisedly). You can link to spreadsheets in a similar way, too, by copying them and using Edit|Paste Special and using the 'Paste Link' option. In all linking cases, the links will need to be updated if you move the source files. Also, since they're not part of the actual document, they won't be included with the file if you copy it to another disk or email it. If you want to distribute the document, I also recommend considering the use of tools like Adobe's Acrobat Distiller (not the free reader) to convert your document(s) to pdf format. Apart from making it harder for someone else to change a document (you can even protect it against copying & printing), it may well make for a much smaller final file size than you'd get from a Word document with all the other documents, spreadsheets and images embedded (or including all the linked files). Cheers wrote in message ps.com... I am seeking your opinion and direction. I just lost part of a very large word document; over 1 GB in size. I sometimes drive thousands of miles to research something. I scan all documents, photograph documents and the location; then insert the JPG image files into a Word document, where the JPG image files are explained, questions asked, and assumptions made. There can many chapters of 500 MB file size; some chapters might be as small as 50 MB, or maybe 25 MB. I regularly study several subjects (books) at one time; each book with many chapters. Occasionally, a chapter in one book needs to be added to another book. Considering each chapters'' size, and considering the books overall size, how should I write and store these documents to make the possibility of file loose and corruption to a minimum? In another project, I collect HTML, txt, JPG, PDF and other file types that I would like to put them into a Word "book" with references and notes. Is there a way to call the file to be printed from word, and allow the header and footer to be on each page printed on the "Called Files?" Can the "Called Files" be an "exhibit" in Word; where the printing format selected by the originator be maintained? Thanks. Thanks |
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