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#1
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I received a large document from a colleague containing study notes for
various topics. I'm looking for suggestions on the simplest and most effective way of converting this word document into a database. I want to be able to find relevant paragraphs of text using a multiple keyword search and have all the results displayed in one place. Dylan |
#2
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Hi Dylan
DDawson wrote: I received a large document from a colleague containing study notes for various topics. I'm looking for suggestions on the simplest and most effective way of converting this word document into a database. I want to be able to find relevant paragraphs of text using a multiple keyword search and have all the results displayed in one place. This does not sound as an "easy project," given what we know about this document. Any code that runs through the document must have a means to separate the content into individual notes. In a document that was not created with that goal in mind, there probably is no way to determine what makes one part (where does it stop, where comes the next). 2cents Robert |
#3
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I don't think Word is designed to get you what you want, and as Robert says,
would be a big hassle. You might look at notetaking programs, which I would expect to have built-in features to make this type of search easier (and I would expect any of them to accept text from Word smoothly). Perhaps MS OneNote? You might ask in those forums whether this would be possible. On the Mac, I might recommend DevonThink, which is advertised as an "information manager", and I believe does things like this. Googling "DevonThink windows" turns up something called EverNote, perhaps check that out: http://slackermanager.com/2005/03/i_still_dig_eve.html Or converting it to PDF would allow a Mac user to use Preview's search capability, which shows a listing in a task pane of the occurrences of a single word, with the surrounding few words. Much less efficient, more like an instant index, but could be helpful. Again, not sure if Windows Acrobat offers something similar, may be worth checking. EndNote, the bibliographic management software, has room for people to take notes on readings, and may have decent search capabilities, I've never tried them. On 10/30/06 4:14 AM, "DDawson" wrote: I received a large document from a colleague containing study notes for various topics. I'm looking for suggestions on the simplest and most effective way of converting this word document into a database. I want to be able to find relevant paragraphs of text using a multiple keyword search and have all the results displayed in one place. Dylan -- Daiya Mitchell, MVP Mac/Word Word FAQ: http://www.word.mvps.org/ MacWord Tips: http://word.mvps.org/Mac/WordMacHome.html What's an MVP? A volunteer! Read the FAQ: http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ |
#4
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Do you want a 'simple and effective' solution, or do you want to use Word?
(given that you can't have both for this purpose) "DDawson" wrote in message ... I received a large document from a colleague containing study notes for various topics. I'm looking for suggestions on the simplest and most effective way of converting this word document into a database. I want to be able to find relevant paragraphs of text using a multiple keyword search and have all the results displayed in one place. Dylan |
#5
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Simple and effective?
"Jezebel" wrote: Do you want a 'simple and effective' solution, or do you want to use Word? (given that you can't have both for this purpose) "DDawson" wrote in message ... I received a large document from a colleague containing study notes for various topics. I'm looking for suggestions on the simplest and most effective way of converting this word document into a database. I want to be able to find relevant paragraphs of text using a multiple keyword search and have all the results displayed in one place. Dylan |
#6
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Split the source document into paragraphs, save each as a seperate file,
then use Yahoo Desktop Search. "DDawson" wrote in message ... Simple and effective? "Jezebel" wrote: Do you want a 'simple and effective' solution, or do you want to use Word? (given that you can't have both for this purpose) "DDawson" wrote in message ... I received a large document from a colleague containing study notes for various topics. I'm looking for suggestions on the simplest and most effective way of converting this word document into a database. I want to be able to find relevant paragraphs of text using a multiple keyword search and have all the results displayed in one place. Dylan |
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