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#1
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Greetings! I have created a very simple merge from a query in Access that
merges into a table in Word. The problem is a field defined as currency in Access does not "carry over" the formatting into the Word document. I can put a dollar sign in front of the field $Amount but I am dealing with large numbers and need the comma separators. Does anyone know how I can carry over the currency formatting from Access, OR correctly format the data field in the Word table? Thanks for any suggestions, Lacie |
#2
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See "Formatting Word fields with switches" on fellow MVP Graham Mayor's
website at http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Please respond to the Newsgroup for the benefit of others who may be interested. Questions sent directly to me will only be answered on a paid consulting basis. Hope this helps, Doug Robbins - Word MVP "LacieMoon" wrote in message ... Greetings! I have created a very simple merge from a query in Access that merges into a table in Word. The problem is a field defined as currency in Access does not "carry over" the formatting into the Word document. I can put a dollar sign in front of the field $Amount but I am dealing with large numbers and need the comma separators. Does anyone know how I can carry over the currency formatting from Access, OR correctly format the data field in the Word table? Thanks for any suggestions, Lacie |
#3
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Perfect Doug! Worked like a charm; thank you for directing me to a great
resource! Lacie "Doug Robbins" wrote: See "Formatting Word fields with switches" on fellow MVP Graham Mayor's website at http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Please respond to the Newsgroup for the benefit of others who may be interested. Questions sent directly to me will only be answered on a paid consulting basis. Hope this helps, Doug Robbins - Word MVP "LacieMoon" wrote in message ... Greetings! I have created a very simple merge from a query in Access that merges into a table in Word. The problem is a field defined as currency in Access does not "carry over" the formatting into the Word document. I can put a dollar sign in front of the field $Amount but I am dealing with large numbers and need the comma separators. Does anyone know how I can carry over the currency formatting from Access, OR correctly format the data field in the Word table? Thanks for any suggestions, Lacie |
#4
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Thanks so much for this information!
"Doug Robbins" wrote: See "Formatting Word fields with switches" on fellow MVP Graham Mayor's website at http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Please respond to the Newsgroup for the benefit of others who may be interested. Questions sent directly to me will only be answered on a paid consulting basis. Hope this helps, Doug Robbins - Word MVP "LacieMoon" wrote in message ... Greetings! I have created a very simple merge from a query in Access that merges into a table in Word. The problem is a field defined as currency in Access does not "carry over" the formatting into the Word document. I can put a dollar sign in front of the field $Amount but I am dealing with large numbers and need the comma separators. Does anyone know how I can carry over the currency formatting from Access, OR correctly format the data field in the Word table? Thanks for any suggestions, Lacie |
#5
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So, did I just take off the "100*" and format all 90 fields to be percentages
with 0 decimals in Access for naught? Are you saying I'm going to have to re-do all that in Word? I had to do that for each field, because I when I selected more than one field in the query, it took away the format options. It took a long time. Now, will I have to make these switch changes in the table in Word individually? I've never used one, but this nonsense makes me want to switch to a mac. Please tell me how to cluster or select all the inserted fields I want and "switdh" them all in one command. Shannon "Doug Robbins" wrote: See "Formatting Word fields with switches" on fellow MVP Graham Mayor's website at http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Please respond to the Newsgroup for the benefit of others who may be interested. Questions sent directly to me will only be answered on a paid consulting basis. Hope this helps, Doug Robbins - Word MVP "LacieMoon" wrote in message ... Greetings! I have created a very simple merge from a query in Access that merges into a table in Word. The problem is a field defined as currency in Access does not "carry over" the formatting into the Word document. I can put a dollar sign in front of the field $Amount but I am dealing with large numbers and need the comma separators. Does anyone know how I can carry over the currency formatting from Access, OR correctly format the data field in the Word table? Thanks for any suggestions, Lacie |
#6
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For the currency, all you need to do is to add a picture switch to the
mergefield in you mailmerge template. To do this: .. select the mergefield .. press Shift-F9 to expose the field code. It should look something like '{MERGEFIELD MyData}', where 'MyData' is your data field's name .. delete everything between 'MyData' and the closing field brace .. add ' \# $,0.00' after 'MyData', so that you end up with '{MERGEFIELD MyData \# $,0.00}' .. press F9 to update the field .. run your mailmerge. However, if you've already converted the values to percentages in Access (heaven knows why), you can recover this in Word with just a little bit more work. In addition to the above, before updating the field: .. select the 'MERGEFIELD MyData' string in your mergefield .. press Ctrl-F9 to insert a new pair of field braces, so that you get '{{MERGEFIELD MyData} \# $,0.00}' .. insert an '=' sign between the first two field braces and '*100' after the third field brace, so that you get '{={MERGEFIELD MyData}*100 \# $,0.00}' Cheers -- macropod [MVP - Microsoft Word] PS: If you want $ without cents, make the picture switch '\# $,0' PPS: Switching to a Mac would make no difference - the same situation applies there too. "Shannon" wrote in message ... So, did I just take off the "100*" and format all 90 fields to be percentages with 0 decimals in Access for naught? Are you saying I'm going to have to re-do all that in Word? I had to do that for each field, because I when I selected more than one field in the query, it took away the format options. It took a long time. Now, will I have to make these switch changes in the table in Word individually? I've never used one, but this nonsense makes me want to switch to a mac. Please tell me how to cluster or select all the inserted fields I want and "switdh" them all in one command. Shannon "Doug Robbins" wrote: See "Formatting Word fields with switches" on fellow MVP Graham Mayor's website at http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Please respond to the Newsgroup for the benefit of others who may be interested. Questions sent directly to me will only be answered on a paid consulting basis. Hope this helps, Doug Robbins - Word MVP "LacieMoon" wrote in message ... Greetings! I have created a very simple merge from a query in Access that merges into a table in Word. The problem is a field defined as currency in Access does not "carry over" the formatting into the Word document. I can put a dollar sign in front of the field $Amount but I am dealing with large numbers and need the comma separators. Does anyone know how I can carry over the currency formatting from Access, OR correctly format the data field in the Word table? Thanks for any suggestions, Lacie |
#7
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Posted to microsoft.public.word.mailmerge.fields
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With a night's sleep, I can quit making mac threats to myself.
"Heaven knows why" tells me there's a cleaner way to do this whole thing. Please let me itterate what you said, since this document has not been published yet. The cleaner it is, the easier it will be for someone else to understand when the church uses it in future surveys (that's what this query is; percentages of survey results;no currency). Are you saying that Field Properties is not the best way to prepare query values for merge fields? Would the cleanest way be to take the raw ".23984879459403" into the merge document, then use switches to make it pretty? These values are merged into a table created in Word. Is there a way to select and format the switches for all of these values in the table (90 of them) with one command? If not, does Excel bring over Field Properties from Access? If so, would it be possible to get the data from Access to Excel, then insert the Excel table into the Word document with Special Paste? Would that be very unclean and cumbersome? Thanks in advance (again). "macropod" wrote: For the currency, all you need to do is to add a picture switch to the mergefield in you mailmerge template. To do this: .. select the mergefield .. press Shift-F9 to expose the field code. It should look something like '{MERGEFIELD MyData}', where 'MyData' is your data field's name .. delete everything between 'MyData' and the closing field brace .. add ' \# $,0.00' after 'MyData', so that you end up with '{MERGEFIELD MyData \# $,0.00}' .. press F9 to update the field .. run your mailmerge. However, if you've already converted the values to percentages in Access (heaven knows why), you can recover this in Word with just a little bit more work. In addition to the above, before updating the field: .. select the 'MERGEFIELD MyData' string in your mergefield .. press Ctrl-F9 to insert a new pair of field braces, so that you get '{{MERGEFIELD MyData} \# $,0.00}' .. insert an '=' sign between the first two field braces and '*100' after the third field brace, so that you get '{={MERGEFIELD MyData}*100 \# $,0.00}' Cheers -- macropod [MVP - Microsoft Word] PS: If you want $ without cents, make the picture switch '\# $,0' PPS: Switching to a Mac would make no difference - the same situation applies there too. "Shannon" wrote in message ... So, did I just take off the "100*" and format all 90 fields to be percentages with 0 decimals in Access for naught? Are you saying I'm going to have to re-do all that in Word? I had to do that for each field, because I when I selected more than one field in the query, it took away the format options. It took a long time. Now, will I have to make these switch changes in the table in Word individually? I've never used one, but this nonsense makes me want to switch to a mac. Please tell me how to cluster or select all the inserted fields I want and "switdh" them all in one command. Shannon "Doug Robbins" wrote: See "Formatting Word fields with switches" on fellow MVP Graham Mayor's website at http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Please respond to the Newsgroup for the benefit of others who may be interested. Questions sent directly to me will only be answered on a paid consulting basis. Hope this helps, Doug Robbins - Word MVP "LacieMoon" wrote in message ... Greetings! I have created a very simple merge from a query in Access that merges into a table in Word. The problem is a field defined as currency in Access does not "carry over" the formatting into the Word document. I can put a dollar sign in front of the field $Amount but I am dealing with large numbers and need the comma separators. Does anyone know how I can carry over the currency formatting from Access, OR correctly format the data field in the Word table? Thanks for any suggestions, Lacie |
#8
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Word merge imports the raw data, so formatting it doesn't help much. See
http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Shannon wrote: With a night's sleep, I can quit making mac threats to myself. "Heaven knows why" tells me there's a cleaner way to do this whole thing. Please let me itterate what you said, since this document has not been published yet. The cleaner it is, the easier it will be for someone else to understand when the church uses it in future surveys (that's what this query is; percentages of survey results;no currency). Are you saying that Field Properties is not the best way to prepare query values for merge fields? Would the cleanest way be to take the raw ".23984879459403" into the merge document, then use switches to make it pretty? These values are merged into a table created in Word. Is there a way to select and format the switches for all of these values in the table (90 of them) with one command? If not, does Excel bring over Field Properties from Access? If so, would it be possible to get the data from Access to Excel, then insert the Excel table into the Word document with Special Paste? Would that be very unclean and cumbersome? Thanks in advance (again). "macropod" wrote: For the currency, all you need to do is to add a picture switch to the mergefield in you mailmerge template. To do this: .. select the mergefield .. press Shift-F9 to expose the field code. It should look something like '{MERGEFIELD MyData}', where 'MyData' is your data field's name .. delete everything between 'MyData' and the closing field brace .. add ' \# $,0.00' after 'MyData', so that you end up with '{MERGEFIELD MyData \# $,0.00}' .. press F9 to update the field .. run your mailmerge. However, if you've already converted the values to percentages in Access (heaven knows why), you can recover this in Word with just a little bit more work. In addition to the above, before updating the field: .. select the 'MERGEFIELD MyData' string in your mergefield .. press Ctrl-F9 to insert a new pair of field braces, so that you get '{{MERGEFIELD MyData} \# $,0.00}' .. insert an '=' sign between the first two field braces and '*100' after the third field brace, so that you get '{={MERGEFIELD MyData}*100 \# $,0.00}' Cheers -- macropod [MVP - Microsoft Word] PS: If you want $ without cents, make the picture switch '\# $,0' PPS: Switching to a Mac would make no difference - the same situation applies there too. "Shannon" wrote in message ... So, did I just take off the "100*" and format all 90 fields to be percentages with 0 decimals in Access for naught? Are you saying I'm going to have to re-do all that in Word? I had to do that for each field, because I when I selected more than one field in the query, it took away the format options. It took a long time. Now, will I have to make these switch changes in the table in Word individually? I've never used one, but this nonsense makes me want to switch to a mac. Please tell me how to cluster or select all the inserted fields I want and "switdh" them all in one command. Shannon "Doug Robbins" wrote: See "Formatting Word fields with switches" on fellow MVP Graham Mayor's website at http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Please respond to the Newsgroup for the benefit of others who may be interested. Questions sent directly to me will only be answered on a paid consulting basis. Hope this helps, Doug Robbins - Word MVP "LacieMoon" wrote in message ... Greetings! I have created a very simple merge from a query in Access that merges into a table in Word. The problem is a field defined as currency in Access does not "carry over" the formatting into the Word document. I can put a dollar sign in front of the field $Amount but I am dealing with large numbers and need the comma separators. Does anyone know how I can carry over the currency formatting from Access, OR correctly format the data field in the Word table? Thanks for any suggestions, Lacie |
#9
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Just a suggestion...
The cleaner it is, the easier it will be for someone else to understand when the church uses it in future surveys (that's what this query is; percentages of survey results;no currency). Every time you connect to Access data from Word there is some translation, which implies that you may need to reformat the data the way you want in Word. If you are inserting the data using mailmerge and { MERGEFIELD } fields then you have the options to format them that have been suggested by others. If you are inserting the data using Insert|Database then you have less control over the format of each column. Personally in trying to achieve a "clean" approach I would typically try to opt for a "repeatable" approach and that would probably rely on a combination of using the right data types in Access and applying the right switches to MERGEFIELD fields in Word, or using a query to return /exactly/ the data I needed (e.g. if it should be a percentage value with a percent sign at the end, return that as a string value and Word should not re-interpret it as a number). However, another approach that may work in your siuation if you do not have need more columns than the maximum no. in a Word table is a. write a query in Access so that the query returns the data you need, in the format you need b. select the query results in Access and Edit|Copy c. Edit|Paste into a blank Word document d. remove the top row e. use that as the data source for a merge (or, if appropriate, insert the table directly into the document you're trying to produce, then format it using a simple macro). Just my 2-c worth. Peter Jamieson "Shannon" wrote in message ... With a night's sleep, I can quit making mac threats to myself. "Heaven knows why" tells me there's a cleaner way to do this whole thing. Please let me itterate what you said, since this document has not been published yet. The cleaner it is, the easier it will be for someone else to understand when the church uses it in future surveys (that's what this query is; percentages of survey results;no currency). Are you saying that Field Properties is not the best way to prepare query values for merge fields? Would the cleanest way be to take the raw ".23984879459403" into the merge document, then use switches to make it pretty? These values are merged into a table created in Word. Is there a way to select and format the switches for all of these values in the table (90 of them) with one command? If not, does Excel bring over Field Properties from Access? If so, would it be possible to get the data from Access to Excel, then insert the Excel table into the Word document with Special Paste? Would that be very unclean and cumbersome? Thanks in advance (again). "macropod" wrote: For the currency, all you need to do is to add a picture switch to the mergefield in you mailmerge template. To do this: .. select the mergefield .. press Shift-F9 to expose the field code. It should look something like '{MERGEFIELD MyData}', where 'MyData' is your data field's name .. delete everything between 'MyData' and the closing field brace .. add ' \# $,0.00' after 'MyData', so that you end up with '{MERGEFIELD MyData \# $,0.00}' .. press F9 to update the field .. run your mailmerge. However, if you've already converted the values to percentages in Access (heaven knows why), you can recover this in Word with just a little bit more work. In addition to the above, before updating the field: .. select the 'MERGEFIELD MyData' string in your mergefield .. press Ctrl-F9 to insert a new pair of field braces, so that you get '{{MERGEFIELD MyData} \# $,0.00}' .. insert an '=' sign between the first two field braces and '*100' after the third field brace, so that you get '{={MERGEFIELD MyData}*100 \# $,0.00}' Cheers -- macropod [MVP - Microsoft Word] PS: If you want $ without cents, make the picture switch '\# $,0' PPS: Switching to a Mac would make no difference - the same situation applies there too. "Shannon" wrote in message ... So, did I just take off the "100*" and format all 90 fields to be percentages with 0 decimals in Access for naught? Are you saying I'm going to have to re-do all that in Word? I had to do that for each field, because I when I selected more than one field in the query, it took away the format options. It took a long time. Now, will I have to make these switch changes in the table in Word individually? I've never used one, but this nonsense makes me want to switch to a mac. Please tell me how to cluster or select all the inserted fields I want and "switdh" them all in one command. Shannon "Doug Robbins" wrote: See "Formatting Word fields with switches" on fellow MVP Graham Mayor's website at http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Please respond to the Newsgroup for the benefit of others who may be interested. Questions sent directly to me will only be answered on a paid consulting basis. Hope this helps, Doug Robbins - Word MVP "LacieMoon" wrote in message ... Greetings! I have created a very simple merge from a query in Access that merges into a table in Word. The problem is a field defined as currency in Access does not "carry over" the formatting into the Word document. I can put a dollar sign in front of the field $Amount but I am dealing with large numbers and need the comma separators. Does anyone know how I can carry over the currency formatting from Access, OR correctly format the data field in the Word table? Thanks for any suggestions, Lacie |
#10
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Does that mean the whole 'Excel' idea is a bad one?
"Graham Mayor" wrote: Word merge imports the raw data, so formatting it doesn't help much. See http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Shannon wrote: With a night's sleep, I can quit making mac threats to myself. "Heaven knows why" tells me there's a cleaner way to do this whole thing. Please let me itterate what you said, since this document has not been published yet. The cleaner it is, the easier it will be for someone else to understand when the church uses it in future surveys (that's what this query is; percentages of survey results;no currency). Are you saying that Field Properties is not the best way to prepare query values for merge fields? Would the cleanest way be to take the raw ".23984879459403" into the merge document, then use switches to make it pretty? These values are merged into a table created in Word. Is there a way to select and format the switches for all of these values in the table (90 of them) with one command? If not, does Excel bring over Field Properties from Access? If so, would it be possible to get the data from Access to Excel, then insert the Excel table into the Word document with Special Paste? Would that be very unclean and cumbersome? Thanks in advance (again). "macropod" wrote: For the currency, all you need to do is to add a picture switch to the mergefield in you mailmerge template. To do this: .. select the mergefield .. press Shift-F9 to expose the field code. It should look something like '{MERGEFIELD MyData}', where 'MyData' is your data field's name .. delete everything between 'MyData' and the closing field brace .. add ' \# $,0.00' after 'MyData', so that you end up with '{MERGEFIELD MyData \# $,0.00}' .. press F9 to update the field .. run your mailmerge. However, if you've already converted the values to percentages in Access (heaven knows why), you can recover this in Word with just a little bit more work. In addition to the above, before updating the field: .. select the 'MERGEFIELD MyData' string in your mergefield .. press Ctrl-F9 to insert a new pair of field braces, so that you get '{{MERGEFIELD MyData} \# $,0.00}' .. insert an '=' sign between the first two field braces and '*100' after the third field brace, so that you get '{={MERGEFIELD MyData}*100 \# $,0.00}' Cheers -- macropod [MVP - Microsoft Word] PS: If you want $ without cents, make the picture switch '\# $,0' PPS: Switching to a Mac would make no difference - the same situation applies there too. "Shannon" wrote in message ... So, did I just take off the "100*" and format all 90 fields to be percentages with 0 decimals in Access for naught? Are you saying I'm going to have to re-do all that in Word? I had to do that for each field, because I when I selected more than one field in the query, it took away the format options. It took a long time. Now, will I have to make these switch changes in the table in Word individually? I've never used one, but this nonsense makes me want to switch to a mac. Please tell me how to cluster or select all the inserted fields I want and "switdh" them all in one command. Shannon "Doug Robbins" wrote: See "Formatting Word fields with switches" on fellow MVP Graham Mayor's website at http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Please respond to the Newsgroup for the benefit of others who may be interested. Questions sent directly to me will only be answered on a paid consulting basis. Hope this helps, Doug Robbins - Word MVP "LacieMoon" wrote in message ... Greetings! I have created a very simple merge from a query in Access that merges into a table in Word. The problem is a field defined as currency in Access does not "carry over" the formatting into the Word document. I can put a dollar sign in front of the field $Amount but I am dealing with large numbers and need the comma separators. Does anyone know how I can carry over the currency formatting from Access, OR correctly format the data field in the Word table? Thanks for any suggestions, Lacie |
#11
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Macropod's suggestion is working. Thanks. It's just a pain to do this 90
times. Someone else prepared the Word survey with tables already set up, otherwise, I could copy and paste the codes. Actually, I could have done that this time, if I had not already entered all the field names into the table. "macropod" wrote: For the currency, all you need to do is to add a picture switch to the mergefield in you mailmerge template. To do this: .. select the mergefield .. press Shift-F9 to expose the field code. It should look something like '{MERGEFIELD MyData}', where 'MyData' is your data field's name .. delete everything between 'MyData' and the closing field brace .. add ' \# $,0.00' after 'MyData', so that you end up with '{MERGEFIELD MyData \# $,0.00}' .. press F9 to update the field .. run your mailmerge. However, if you've already converted the values to percentages in Access (heaven knows why), you can recover this in Word with just a little bit more work. In addition to the above, before updating the field: .. select the 'MERGEFIELD MyData' string in your mergefield .. press Ctrl-F9 to insert a new pair of field braces, so that you get '{{MERGEFIELD MyData} \# $,0.00}' .. insert an '=' sign between the first two field braces and '*100' after the third field brace, so that you get '{={MERGEFIELD MyData}*100 \# $,0.00}' Cheers -- macropod [MVP - Microsoft Word] PS: If you want $ without cents, make the picture switch '\# $,0' PPS: Switching to a Mac would make no difference - the same situation applies there too. "Shannon" wrote in message ... So, did I just take off the "100*" and format all 90 fields to be percentages with 0 decimals in Access for naught? Are you saying I'm going to have to re-do all that in Word? I had to do that for each field, because I when I selected more than one field in the query, it took away the format options. It took a long time. Now, will I have to make these switch changes in the table in Word individually? I've never used one, but this nonsense makes me want to switch to a mac. Please tell me how to cluster or select all the inserted fields I want and "switdh" them all in one command. Shannon "Doug Robbins" wrote: See "Formatting Word fields with switches" on fellow MVP Graham Mayor's website at http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Please respond to the Newsgroup for the benefit of others who may be interested. Questions sent directly to me will only be answered on a paid consulting basis. Hope this helps, Doug Robbins - Word MVP "LacieMoon" wrote in message ... Greetings! I have created a very simple merge from a query in Access that merges into a table in Word. The problem is a field defined as currency in Access does not "carry over" the formatting into the Word document. I can put a dollar sign in front of the field $Amount but I am dealing with large numbers and need the comma separators. Does anyone know how I can carry over the currency formatting from Access, OR correctly format the data field in the Word table? Thanks for any suggestions, Lacie |
#12
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Hi Shannon,
You can simplify the updating process by toggling field code display on, via Alt-F9, then using Copy/Paste to replicate the changes. Depending on whether you needed only to add the picture switch or introduce the extra field coding, it may be easier to copy & paste: .. the field switch to all affected fields; or .. a single recoded field to all required locations, then update the field names Cheers -- macropod [MVP - Microsoft Word] "Shannon" wrote in message ... Macropod's suggestion is working. Thanks. It's just a pain to do this 90 times. Someone else prepared the Word survey with tables already set up, otherwise, I could copy and paste the codes. Actually, I could have done that this time, if I had not already entered all the field names into the table. "macropod" wrote: For the currency, all you need to do is to add a picture switch to the mergefield in you mailmerge template. To do this: .. select the mergefield .. press Shift-F9 to expose the field code. It should look something like '{MERGEFIELD MyData}', where 'MyData' is your data field's name .. delete everything between 'MyData' and the closing field brace .. add ' \# $,0.00' after 'MyData', so that you end up with '{MERGEFIELD MyData \# $,0.00}' .. press F9 to update the field .. run your mailmerge. However, if you've already converted the values to percentages in Access (heaven knows why), you can recover this in Word with just a little bit more work. In addition to the above, before updating the field: .. select the 'MERGEFIELD MyData' string in your mergefield .. press Ctrl-F9 to insert a new pair of field braces, so that you get '{{MERGEFIELD MyData} \# $,0.00}' .. insert an '=' sign between the first two field braces and '*100' after the third field brace, so that you get '{={MERGEFIELD MyData}*100 \# $,0.00}' Cheers -- macropod [MVP - Microsoft Word] PS: If you want $ without cents, make the picture switch '\# $,0' PPS: Switching to a Mac would make no difference - the same situation applies there too. "Shannon" wrote in message ... So, did I just take off the "100*" and format all 90 fields to be percentages with 0 decimals in Access for naught? Are you saying I'm going to have to re-do all that in Word? I had to do that for each field, because I when I selected more than one field in the query, it took away the format options. It took a long time. Now, will I have to make these switch changes in the table in Word individually? I've never used one, but this nonsense makes me want to switch to a mac. Please tell me how to cluster or select all the inserted fields I want and "switdh" them all in one command. Shannon "Doug Robbins" wrote: See "Formatting Word fields with switches" on fellow MVP Graham Mayor's website at http://www.gmayor.com/formatting_word_fields.htm -- Please respond to the Newsgroup for the benefit of others who may be interested. Questions sent directly to me will only be answered on a paid consulting basis. Hope this helps, Doug Robbins - Word MVP "LacieMoon" wrote in message ... Greetings! I have created a very simple merge from a query in Access that merges into a table in Word. The problem is a field defined as currency in Access does not "carry over" the formatting into the Word document. I can put a dollar sign in front of the field $Amount but I am dealing with large numbers and need the comma separators. Does anyone know how I can carry over the currency formatting from Access, OR correctly format the data field in the Word table? Thanks for any suggestions, Lacie |
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