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If I'm preparing a long text file- often I'll prepare it as a series of
files rather than as a single long file. It's more convenient because often such large files (for me) are already broken up into sections that are usually less than a page anyways. Then if I need to edit a page I only need to load the specific page not a long document. This is fine except when I want to save the full item as a pdf file which I can now do- with Office 2007- I downloaded the plug-in which can save the file as a pdf. But, I can't seem to find an easy way to start with the first page, then tell Word to append each succeeding page. Since each page tends to have complex formatting- which changes from page to page- it's not easy to just copy each page to the clipboard, then paste into an appended blank page. There must be an easier way. Years ago I had a copy of Adobe Acrobat- and that program of course had a nice easy way to append pdf files- so back then, I'd save each doc file to a pdf, then append them one at a time- but, I don't have that computer and Acrobat anymore and I can't afford to buy it. Joe |
#2
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Hi Joe,
If I'm preparing a long text file- often I'll prepare it as a series of files rather than as a single long file. It's more convenient because often such large files (for me) are already broken up into sections that are usually less than a page anyways. Then if I need to edit a page I only need to load the specific page not a long document. This is fine except when I want to save the full item as a pdf file which I can now do- with Office 2007- I downloaded the plug-in which can save the file as a pdf. But, I can't seem to find an easy way to start with the first page, then tell Word to append each succeeding page. Since each page tends to have complex formatting- which changes from page to page- it's not easy to just copy each page to the clipboard, then paste into an appended blank page. You could try setting up a "master file". Start with a blank document. Then you can either 1. Insert/File and choose "Link". This will give you a "long" document, but you needn't ever edit it. Just open it when you want to print. 2. Switch to the Outline view, click the "Master Document" button and use those tools to insert each file as a sub-document. This is very similar to the above, but Word will retain section-level formatting (headers, footers, etc.) from the individual documents. However, this approach is generally less stable, so never edit the individual documents through the master, and always make back-up copies before using the master. Cindy Meister INTER-Solutions, Switzerland http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindymeister (last update Jun 17 2005) http://www.word.mvps.org This reply is posted in the Newsgroup; please post any follow question or reply in the newsgroup and not by e-mail :-) |
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