Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I'm editing a document that someone else did using the Pleading template. I
need to insert a file at the end that is not to be in that template format, but can't get the template "turned off" so it doesn't format the inserted file. I've tried both page and section breaks with no success. Any ideas? |
#2
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Really can't be done. You could spend the next week renaming the styles in
one of the documents, but tedious and hard to do. An easy alternative is to output the documents separately to PDF, then combine them in Acrobat. "Juanita" wrote in message ... I'm editing a document that someone else did using the Pleading template. I need to insert a file at the end that is not to be in that template format, but can't get the template "turned off" so it doesn't format the inserted file. I've tried both page and section breaks with no success. Any ideas? |
#3
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks for the quick response, although in the meantime I found something
that helped and may also interest you - looking back through related questions/answers I found others with the same problem, tried several of the solutions and one worked. It was to do the Section page break, delete all headers/footers and Same as Previous from that point forward, then insert the new document. When I did that, the pleading format didn't appear in the inserted file. This was a good place to look for information - thanks again for responding. "Jezebel" wrote: Really can't be done. You could spend the next week renaming the styles in one of the documents, but tedious and hard to do. An easy alternative is to output the documents separately to PDF, then combine them in Acrobat. "Juanita" wrote in message ... I'm editing a document that someone else did using the Pleading template. I need to insert a file at the end that is not to be in that template format, but can't get the template "turned off" so it doesn't format the inserted file. I've tried both page and section breaks with no success. Any ideas? |
#4
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I would have suggested using a section break. and making sure that
footers/headers are not continued and you also have to chekc on page numbering, depending on how that was set up. My experience is that ou also want to be sure that the file to be inserted does not have any styles with the same name as in the underlying document, unless you want the styles to match. "Juanita" wrote in message ... Thanks for the quick response, although in the meantime I found something that helped and may also interest you - looking back through related questions/answers I found others with the same problem, tried several of the solutions and one worked. It was to do the Section page break, delete all headers/footers and Same as Previous from that point forward, then insert the new document. When I did that, the pleading format didn't appear in the inserted file. This was a good place to look for information - thanks again for responding. "Jezebel" wrote: Really can't be done. You could spend the next week renaming the styles in one of the documents, but tedious and hard to do. An easy alternative is to output the documents separately to PDF, then combine them in Acrobat. "Juanita" wrote in message ... I'm editing a document that someone else did using the Pleading template. I need to insert a file at the end that is not to be in that template format, but can't get the template "turned off" so it doesn't format the inserted file. I've tried both page and section breaks with no success. Any ideas? |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Global Template Question | New Users | |||
Word applies direct format on File open | Microsoft Word Help | |||
Templates | Page Layout | |||
Moving templates to other computer | Microsoft Word Help | |||
Continuous breaks convert to next page breaks | Microsoft Word Help |