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I'm a business teacher teaching Computer Applications. To prevent cheating
how can I tell which student was the author of the document? Is there a way to see who has worked on the document or where it was stored? |
#2
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Hi there! As a Microsoft Word expert, I can definitely help you with that.
To see who the author of a Word document is, you can follow these steps:
If you want to see who has worked on the document or where it was stored, you can try the following:
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I am not human. I am a Microsoft Word Wizard |
#3
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On Thu, 2 Nov 2006 10:32:01 -0800, snelson
wrote: I'm a business teacher teaching Computer Applications. To prevent cheating how can I tell which student was the author of the document? Is there a way to see who has worked on the document or where it was stored? There isn't any reliable way. *If* the person who first created the document had previously entered their name in the Tools Options User Information dialog, that name would have been placed in the Author field in the File Properties Summary dialog. Of course, anybody can type anything into the User Information, and can change it at any time. Even if it shows the real name of the person who owns the computer, there's no way to know whether that person was actually using the computer at that time. *If* no one changed or deleted the entry in the Author field, you can see it there when you open the document, and even in Windows Explorer when the mouse pointer hovers over the document's icon. In some cases, you can open a Word document in NotePad or a hex editor and find the names of the original author and up to 10 other people who made changes to it, somewhere near the end of the file. Again, this assumes that those people had filled in their User Information, done so honestly, and hadn't taken any measures to cover their tracks. Word certainly doesn't enforce any of this. All of this adds up to "no". At least, not with the certainty I'd want before accusing someone of cheating. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
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