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#1
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I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get
'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#2
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You could try deleting the Data key in the registry. See
http://word.mvps.org/faqs/apperrors/missingmenusetc.htm. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Xylophone" wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#3
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Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some
settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#4
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Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham,
macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#5
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The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate
modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#6
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Suzanne,
Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#7
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You're in good hands with the group you've been dealing with, but I just
wanted to let you know you aren't alone:0) I believe the "missing link" in your thoughts is that macros (VBA), DOS, etc. are *programming languages* that need to be learned just like any spoken language. Perhaps an idiot savant could just sit down & compose working code without having studied it, but I would imagine most of us aren't in that category ![]() Further, like most any other body of knowledge, you have to routinely practice the craft. If you don't have the time, need, or interest to write code regularly you can't be expected to know "what to put in" at the drop of a hat. That's why we have to rely on the kind-hearted souls - Like Stefan, Graham, Suzanne, et al. - who *do* have those skills to help us out:-) Regards |:) Bob Jones [MVP] Office:Mac On 7/11/07 3:57 AM, in article , "Xylophone" wrote: Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#8
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Bob
Delightfully and most sensitively put! "CyberTaz" wrote in message .. . You're in good hands with the group you've been dealing with, but I just wanted to let you know you aren't alone:0) I believe the "missing link" in your thoughts is that macros (VBA), DOS, etc. are *programming languages* that need to be learned just like any spoken language. Perhaps an idiot savant could just sit down & compose working code without having studied it, but I would imagine most of us aren't in that category ![]() Further, like most any other body of knowledge, you have to routinely practice the craft. If you don't have the time, need, or interest to write code regularly you can't be expected to know "what to put in" at the drop of a hat. That's why we have to rely on the kind-hearted souls - Like Stefan, Graham, Suzanne, et al. - who *do* have those skills to help us out:-) Regards |:) Bob Jones [MVP] Office:Mac On 7/11/07 3:57 AM, in article , "Xylophone" wrote: Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#9
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Re Stefan's registry adjustment, I find in Regedit (I run Word 2003 as part
of Office 2003), I have variously Word 8, 10, 11 and 12. All except 12 have 'Word/Data' as an entry, as described in Stefan's article. So which one or ones do I delete? Why should this resolve my 'wings' problem - because this is a problem in my 'Word/Data/Settings? If I delete that entry, I assume I will have to reset Word from afresh to my preferred settings. Is that correct? Are there any dangers in deleting the registry entry? Thanks "Stefan Blom" wrote in message ... You could try deleting the Data key in the registry. See http://word.mvps.org/faqs/apperrors/missingmenusetc.htm. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Xylophone" wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#10
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Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know
that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#11
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Word 2003 is Word 11. Word 12 is presumably the trial version of Office 2007
that you have installed and removed at some time. Word 8 is Word 97, Word 10 is Word XP/2002. I am surprised that these keys still have content. When you delete the settings Subkey Word will rebuild a new default one. If unsure, rename it to Oldsettings with Word closed. The macro approach is simpler and more reliable. Surprising the things that irritate users. I had never even concerned myself about the 'wings' until you mentioned it - and you appear to know what they indicate. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: Re Stefan's registry adjustment, I find in Regedit (I run Word 2003 as part of Office 2003), I have variously Word 8, 10, 11 and 12. All except 12 have 'Word/Data' as an entry, as described in Stefan's article. So which one or ones do I delete? Why should this resolve my 'wings' problem - because this is a problem in my 'Word/Data/Settings? If I delete that entry, I assume I will have to reset Word from afresh to my preferred settings. Is that correct? Are there any dangers in deleting the registry entry? Thanks "Stefan Blom" wrote in message ... You could try deleting the Data key in the registry. See http://word.mvps.org/faqs/apperrors/missingmenusetc.htm. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Xylophone" wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#12
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Thanks, Graham
"Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 is Word 11. Word 12 is presumably the trial version of Office 2007 that you have installed and removed at some time. Word 8 is Word 97, Word 10 is Word XP/2002. I am surprised that these keys still have content. When you delete the settings Subkey Word will rebuild a new default one. If unsure, rename it to Oldsettings with Word closed. The macro approach is simpler and more reliable. Surprising the things that irritate users. I had never even concerned myself about the 'wings' until you mentioned it - and you appear to know what they indicate. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: Re Stefan's registry adjustment, I find in Regedit (I run Word 2003 as part of Office 2003), I have variously Word 8, 10, 11 and 12. All except 12 have 'Word/Data' as an entry, as described in Stefan's article. So which one or ones do I delete? Why should this resolve my 'wings' problem - because this is a problem in my 'Word/Data/Settings? If I delete that entry, I assume I will have to reset Word from afresh to my preferred settings. Is that correct? Are there any dangers in deleting the registry entry? Thanks "Stefan Blom" wrote in message ... You could try deleting the Data key in the registry. See http://word.mvps.org/faqs/apperrors/missingmenusetc.htm. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Xylophone" wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#13
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Thanks, Suzanne
I am grateful for everyone's valuable time here. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#14
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First, I want to make it perfectly clear that I'm not taking credit for the
article I referred you to... :-) The authors were Dave Rado and J.E. McGimpsey (they are credited in the article, below the title). Second, the (possible) problem with the Data key is that it doesn't seem to retain the settings correctly, which is what should be corrected after you delete (or rename) it and have Word create a new one. The actual deletion of the key restores the default settings of Word, and you should then (hopefully) be able to make the changes that you want via the user interface. As Graham wrote, if this doesn't work, use a macro instead. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Re Stefan's registry adjustment, I find in Regedit (I run Word 2003 as part of Office 2003), I have variously Word 8, 10, 11 and 12. All except 12 have 'Word/Data' as an entry, as described in Stefan's article. So which one or ones do I delete? Why should this resolve my 'wings' problem - because this is a problem in my 'Word/Data/Settings? If I delete that entry, I assume I will have to reset Word from afresh to my preferred settings. Is that correct? Are there any dangers in deleting the registry entry? Thanks "Stefan Blom" wrote in message ... You could try deleting the Data key in the registry. See http://word.mvps.org/faqs/apperrors/missingmenusetc.htm. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Xylophone" wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#15
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Surprising the things that irritate users. I had never even concerned
myself about the 'wings' [...] FWIW, the "wings" annoy me too. :-) Actually, what annoys me is what they represent: inserting blank paragraphs and tab characters to position text, which is completely inappropriate in a word processing program. :-( -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 is Word 11. Word 12 is presumably the trial version of Office 2007 that you have installed and removed at some time. Word 8 is Word 97, Word 10 is Word XP/2002. I am surprised that these keys still have content. When you delete the settings Subkey Word will rebuild a new default one. If unsure, rename it to Oldsettings with Word closed. The macro approach is simpler and more reliable. Surprising the things that irritate users. I had never even concerned myself about the 'wings' until you mentioned it - and you appear to know what they indicate. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: Re Stefan's registry adjustment, I find in Regedit (I run Word 2003 as part of Office 2003), I have variously Word 8, 10, 11 and 12. All except 12 have 'Word/Data' as an entry, as described in Stefan's article. So which one or ones do I delete? Why should this resolve my 'wings' problem - because this is a problem in my 'Word/Data/Settings? If I delete that entry, I assume I will have to reset Word from afresh to my preferred settings. Is that correct? Are there any dangers in deleting the registry entry? Thanks "Stefan Blom" wrote in message ... You could try deleting the Data key in the registry. See http://word.mvps.org/faqs/apperrors/missingmenusetc.htm. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Xylophone" wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
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I agree with Stefan on both points. "Click and type" is one of the first
options I disable, and I would be visually annoyed by the "fussiness" of the pointer in any case. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Stefan Blom" wrote in message ... Surprising the things that irritate users. I had never even concerned myself about the 'wings' [...] FWIW, the "wings" annoy me too. :-) Actually, what annoys me is what they represent: inserting blank paragraphs and tab characters to position text, which is completely inappropriate in a word processing program. :-( -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 is Word 11. Word 12 is presumably the trial version of Office 2007 that you have installed and removed at some time. Word 8 is Word 97, Word 10 is Word XP/2002. I am surprised that these keys still have content. When you delete the settings Subkey Word will rebuild a new default one. If unsure, rename it to Oldsettings with Word closed. The macro approach is simpler and more reliable. Surprising the things that irritate users. I had never even concerned myself about the 'wings' until you mentioned it - and you appear to know what they indicate. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: Re Stefan's registry adjustment, I find in Regedit (I run Word 2003 as part of Office 2003), I have variously Word 8, 10, 11 and 12. All except 12 have 'Word/Data' as an entry, as described in Stefan's article. So which one or ones do I delete? Why should this resolve my 'wings' problem - because this is a problem in my 'Word/Data/Settings? If I delete that entry, I assume I will have to reset Word from afresh to my preferred settings. Is that correct? Are there any dangers in deleting the registry entry? Thanks "Stefan Blom" wrote in message ... You could try deleting the Data key in the registry. See http://word.mvps.org/faqs/apperrors/missingmenusetc.htm. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Xylophone" wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
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I can't make head nor tail of the alleged 'idiot's guide. Much of it does
not appear in my use of Word, so I have to guess. That takes me so far. I create a 'Wings' macro. This takes me into MS Virtual Basic with some lines already there. Then I paste the line supplied in the email over those lines. This leaves me with the the line, and only that. Then what? I can't save the line, as I don't know where it would be saved to, if anywhere. As for auto entries, I can't see any or any links to or anything to do with auto entries. So how do I get the line into an auto entry, etc. as advised. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
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AFAIK, the Visual Basic Editor has not changed for Word 2007. It seems to me
that Graham's instructions are very clear. You have already managed to create your macro and get to the VBE, where I'm assuming you're seeing this: Sub Wings() ' ' Wings Macro ' Macro created date by user ' End Sub You paste the VBA code you were given above End Sub, then click the Save button on the VBE toolbar. You don't have to choose where to save it, as Word already knows this (the module already exists, is already saved). But this really won't help you much because Wings is not the correct name of the macro; you need to create (or edit) a macro named AutoNew and one called AutoRun. If you didn't find this information in Graham's article, then you did not read all of it because there is a section toward the end titled "Auto... macros" that gives illustrations of several macros similar to the one you're trying to create. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... I can't make head nor tail of the alleged 'idiot's guide. Much of it does not appear in my use of Word, so I have to guess. That takes me so far. I create a 'Wings' macro. This takes me into MS Virtual Basic with some lines already there. Then I paste the line supplied in the email over those lines. This leaves me with the the line, and only that. Then what? I can't save the line, as I don't know where it would be saved to, if anywhere. As for auto entries, I can't see any or any links to or anything to do with auto entries. So how do I get the line into an auto entry, etc. as advised. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
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Thanks, Suzanne. The article mentioned autoopen and autonew but did not say
these are the names you give to the macros you create in the editor. I have now done so thanks to you. I have just come away from a research committee where we were much exercised by the lack of use of plain English in documentation. A moment's thought would tell the author of the article to which Graham refers that it does not explain what it sets out to explain to an idiot. What didn't the author simply run his draft past an idiot, or a few idiots. I recall the instructions I struggled with in the case of Norton Ghost, where to me they were literally incomprehensible. The guy who wrote them would no doubt be offended by that, and express surprise that anyone should think that. He understands and he has expressed his understanding. What he did not do is express it in the language of the ordinary person who does not understand. That after all is the purpose of instructions. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... AFAIK, the Visual Basic Editor has not changed for Word 2007. It seems to me that Graham's instructions are very clear. You have already managed to create your macro and get to the VBE, where I'm assuming you're seeing this: Sub Wings() ' ' Wings Macro ' Macro created date by user ' End Sub You paste the VBA code you were given above End Sub, then click the Save button on the VBE toolbar. You don't have to choose where to save it, as Word already knows this (the module already exists, is already saved). But this really won't help you much because Wings is not the correct name of the macro; you need to create (or edit) a macro named AutoNew and one called AutoRun. If you didn't find this information in Graham's article, then you did not read all of it because there is a section toward the end titled "Auto... macros" that gives illustrations of several macros similar to the one you're trying to create. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... I can't make head nor tail of the alleged 'idiot's guide. Much of it does not appear in my use of Word, so I have to guess. That takes me so far. I create a 'Wings' macro. This takes me into MS Virtual Basic with some lines already there. Then I paste the line supplied in the email over those lines. This leaves me with the the line, and only that. Then what? I can't save the line, as I don't know where it would be saved to, if anywhere. As for auto entries, I can't see any or any links to or anything to do with auto entries. So how do I get the line into an auto entry, etc. as advised. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
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You are not creating a 'Wings' macro, you are creating an autonew macro and
an autoopen macro. Assuming that you have not previously created any macros with these names, copy the following into your vba editor (the illustrations on the web site should match your version of Word) Sub AutoNew() Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Sub AutoOpen Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Click the save button on the vba editor toolbar and close the vba editor. You will find on the web site an expanded use of these auto macros to take care of those issues where Word will not retain the settings. if you use any of those then you add in the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to those macros rather than create new macros with the same names. Macros are fairly straightforward. They are simply instructions to operate Word functions. I don't see how I could have made their implementation any simpler than on the web site http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm but if you can think of anything that would make it easier for beginners, then by all means let me know and I will see what can be done. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I can't make head nor tail of the alleged 'idiot's guide. Much of it does not appear in my use of Word, so I have to guess. That takes me so far. I create a 'Wings' macro. This takes me into MS Virtual Basic with some lines already there. Then I paste the line supplied in the email over those lines. This leaves me with the line, and only that. Then what? I can't save the line, as I don't know where it would be saved to, if anywhere. As for auto entries, I can't see any or any links to or anything to do with auto entries. So how do I get the line into an auto entry, etc. as advised. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#21
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The article I referred to is one I wrote myself. Approximately 1300 people a
month view that page - and only rarely has anyone provided any feedback to the effect that it is difficult to understand. Where the criticism has been valid, I have made changes to cover those criticisms. I have also recently added alternative illustration to show where Word 2007 differs from the earlier versions. I said in my original reply "add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template." I then pointed you to my web page where autonew and autoopen macros are explained as well as how to implement the use of vba code posted in newsgroup forums. I also have a page on my web site explaining how to use Norton Ghost in pictures that a child should be able to understand. Hopefully mine was not the page you were referring to ![]() -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: Thanks, Suzanne. The article mentioned autoopen and autonew but did not say these are the names you give to the macros you create in the editor. I have now done so thanks to you. I have just come away from a research committee where we were much exercised by the lack of use of plain English in documentation. A moment's thought would tell the author of the article to which Graham refers that it does not explain what it sets out to explain to an idiot. What didn't the author simply run his draft past an idiot, or a few idiots. I recall the instructions I struggled with in the case of Norton Ghost, where to me they were literally incomprehensible. The guy who wrote them would no doubt be offended by that, and express surprise that anyone should think that. He understands and he has expressed his understanding. What he did not do is express it in the language of the ordinary person who does not understand. That after all is the purpose of instructions. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... AFAIK, the Visual Basic Editor has not changed for Word 2007. It seems to me that Graham's instructions are very clear. You have already managed to create your macro and get to the VBE, where I'm assuming you're seeing this: Sub Wings() ' ' Wings Macro ' Macro created date by user ' End Sub You paste the VBA code you were given above End Sub, then click the Save button on the VBE toolbar. You don't have to choose where to save it, as Word already knows this (the module already exists, is already saved). But this really won't help you much because Wings is not the correct name of the macro; you need to create (or edit) a macro named AutoNew and one called AutoRun. If you didn't find this information in Graham's article, then you did not read all of it because there is a section toward the end titled "Auto... macros" that gives illustrations of several macros similar to the one you're trying to create. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... I can't make head nor tail of the alleged 'idiot's guide. Much of it does not appear in my use of Word, so I have to guess. That takes me so far. I create a 'Wings' macro. This takes me into MS Virtual Basic with some lines already there. Then I paste the line supplied in the email over those lines. This leaves me with the the line, and only that. Then what? I can't save the line, as I don't know where it would be saved to, if anywhere. As for auto entries, I can't see any or any links to or anything to do with auto entries. So how do I get the line into an auto entry, etc. as advised. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#22
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Graham,
See my effort below, which constitutes a description of the process I have gone through on my PC, which I would find pretty fail-safe. Images of the program I find double-edged: they can be helpful, but if they don't match exactly what I see on the screen as I go through, I get anxious that maybe you are talking about a different version of the program or I am not using mine correctly. So I tend to mistrust images. A talk-through I find better. A talk-through and images might be better. Your call Open Word Click on Tools/Macro - then on Macros This brings up a box headed 'Macros'' In that box, at the top, where it says 'Macro' name, a name will already be there. You have to delete that in readiness to put in the new name, (as to which, see below). To do this, select the name and click the 'delete' button on your keyboard. In the name space that is now empty type the word 'autoopen' (no hyphen) (nothing you are asked in this guide to type in is typed in including the quotation marks: they are there to tell you these are the words to be typed in) Towards the bottom of the Macros box, right click on 'Macros in.' This brings up a drop-down menu. In that menu, click on 'Normal.dot (global template)'. To the right of the box, click on 'Create' The box then disappears and the macro editor appears, which is headed 'Microsoft Visual Basic - Normal'. This is in two sections, the one on the right being the editing box. This will have lines of text already in it Within this editing box, above the line that says 'End sub', type in the line 'Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False' In the toolbar at top of the editor, click on the 'Save' symbol In the same toolbar, click on 'File' and then 'Close and return to Microsoft Word' You are now finished "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... You are not creating a 'Wings' macro, you are creating an autonew macro and an autoopen macro. Assuming that you have not previously created any macros with these names, copy the following into your vba editor (the illustrations on the web site should match your version of Word) Sub AutoNew() Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Sub AutoOpen Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Click the save button on the vba editor toolbar and close the vba editor. You will find on the web site an expanded use of these auto macros to take care of those issues where Word will not retain the settings. if you use any of those then you add in the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to those macros rather than create new macros with the same names. Macros are fairly straightforward. They are simply instructions to operate Word functions. I don't see how I could have made their implementation any simpler than on the web site http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm but if you can think of anything that would make it easier for beginners, then by all means let me know and I will see what can be done. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I can't make head nor tail of the alleged 'idiot's guide. Much of it does not appear in my use of Word, so I have to guess. That takes me so far. I create a 'Wings' macro. This takes me into MS Virtual Basic with some lines already there. Then I paste the line supplied in the email over those lines. This leaves me with the line, and only that. Then what? I can't save the line, as I don't know where it would be saved to, if anywhere. As for auto entries, I can't see any or any links to or anything to do with auto entries. So how do I get the line into an auto entry, etc. as advised. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#23
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OK, I will take another look at it
![]() -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: Graham, See my effort below, which constitutes a description of the process I have gone through on my PC, which I would find pretty fail-safe. Images of the program I find double-edged: they can be helpful, but if they don't match exactly what I see on the screen as I go through, I get anxious that maybe you are talking about a different version of the program or I am not using mine correctly. So I tend to mistrust images. A talk-through I find better. A talk-through and images might be better. Your call Open Word Click on Tools/Macro - then on Macros This brings up a box headed 'Macros'' In that box, at the top, where it says 'Macro' name, a name will already be there. You have to delete that in readiness to put in the new name, (as to which, see below). To do this, select the name and click the 'delete' button on your keyboard. In the name space that is now empty type the word 'autoopen' (no hyphen) (nothing you are asked in this guide to type in is typed in including the quotation marks: they are there to tell you these are the words to be typed in) Towards the bottom of the Macros box, right click on 'Macros in.' This brings up a drop-down menu. In that menu, click on 'Normal.dot (global template)'. To the right of the box, click on 'Create' The box then disappears and the macro editor appears, which is headed 'Microsoft Visual Basic - Normal'. This is in two sections, the one on the right being the editing box. This will have lines of text already in it Within this editing box, above the line that says 'End sub', type in the line 'Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False' In the toolbar at top of the editor, click on the 'Save' symbol In the same toolbar, click on 'File' and then 'Close and return to Microsoft Word' You are now finished "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... You are not creating a 'Wings' macro, you are creating an autonew macro and an autoopen macro. Assuming that you have not previously created any macros with these names, copy the following into your vba editor (the illustrations on the web site should match your version of Word) Sub AutoNew() Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Sub AutoOpen Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Click the save button on the vba editor toolbar and close the vba editor. You will find on the web site an expanded use of these auto macros to take care of those issues where Word will not retain the settings. if you use any of those then you add in the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to those macros rather than create new macros with the same names. Macros are fairly straightforward. They are simply instructions to operate Word functions. I don't see how I could have made their implementation any simpler than on the web site http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm but if you can think of anything that would make it easier for beginners, then by all means let me know and I will see what can be done. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I can't make head nor tail of the alleged 'idiot's guide. Much of it does not appear in my use of Word, so I have to guess. That takes me so far. I create a 'Wings' macro. This takes me into MS Virtual Basic with some lines already there. Then I paste the line supplied in the email over those lines. This leaves me with the line, and only that. Then what? I can't save the line, as I don't know where it would be saved to, if anywhere. As for auto entries, I can't see any or any links to or anything to do with auto entries. So how do I get the line into an auto entry, etc. as advised. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#24
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I now find that when I open a Word doc (but not Word), the first thing I get
is the macro editor, with the error message: "compile error invalid outside procedure" on top of the lines in the editor: "Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False Sub AddTBMenuItem() ' ' AddTBMenuItem Macro ' Macro created 13/07/2007 by malcolm harrison ' End Sub Sub Autoopen() ' ' Autoopen Macro ' Macro created 14/07/2007 by malcolm harrison ' Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Sub Autonew() ' ' Autonew Macro ' Macro created 14/07/2007 by malcolm harrison ' Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Sub AddTBToolbarItem() ' ' AddTBToolbarItem Macro ' Macro created 14/07/2007 by malcolm harrison ' End Sub" Please advise further. Thanks "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... OK, I will take another look at it ![]() -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: Graham, See my effort below, which constitutes a description of the process I have gone through on my PC, which I would find pretty fail-safe. Images of the program I find double-edged: they can be helpful, but if they don't match exactly what I see on the screen as I go through, I get anxious that maybe you are talking about a different version of the program or I am not using mine correctly. So I tend to mistrust images. A talk-through I find better. A talk-through and images might be better. Your call Open Word Click on Tools/Macro - then on Macros This brings up a box headed 'Macros'' In that box, at the top, where it says 'Macro' name, a name will already be there. You have to delete that in readiness to put in the new name, (as to which, see below). To do this, select the name and click the 'delete' button on your keyboard. In the name space that is now empty type the word 'autoopen' (no hyphen) (nothing you are asked in this guide to type in is typed in including the quotation marks: they are there to tell you these are the words to be typed in) Towards the bottom of the Macros box, right click on 'Macros in.' This brings up a drop-down menu. In that menu, click on 'Normal.dot (global template)'. To the right of the box, click on 'Create' The box then disappears and the macro editor appears, which is headed 'Microsoft Visual Basic - Normal'. This is in two sections, the one on the right being the editing box. This will have lines of text already in it Within this editing box, above the line that says 'End sub', type in the line 'Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False' In the toolbar at top of the editor, click on the 'Save' symbol In the same toolbar, click on 'File' and then 'Close and return to Microsoft Word' You are now finished "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... You are not creating a 'Wings' macro, you are creating an autonew macro and an autoopen macro. Assuming that you have not previously created any macros with these names, copy the following into your vba editor (the illustrations on the web site should match your version of Word) Sub AutoNew() Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Sub AutoOpen Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Click the save button on the vba editor toolbar and close the vba editor. You will find on the web site an expanded use of these auto macros to take care of those issues where Word will not retain the settings. if you use any of those then you add in the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to those macros rather than create new macros with the same names. Macros are fairly straightforward. They are simply instructions to operate Word functions. I don't see how I could have made their implementation any simpler than on the web site http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm but if you can think of anything that would make it easier for beginners, then by all means let me know and I will see what can be done. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I can't make head nor tail of the alleged 'idiot's guide. Much of it does not appear in my use of Word, so I have to guess. That takes me so far. I create a 'Wings' macro. This takes me into MS Virtual Basic with some lines already there. Then I paste the line supplied in the email over those lines. This leaves me with the line, and only that. Then what? I can't save the line, as I don't know where it would be saved to, if anywhere. As for auto entries, I can't see any or any links to or anything to do with auto entries. So how do I get the line into an auto entry, etc. as advised. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#25
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Delete the line
Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False before Sub AddTBMenuItem() as it is outside of a procedure (Sub - End Sub) -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "Xylophone" wrote in message ... I now find that when I open a Word doc (but not Word), the first thing I get is the macro editor, with the error message: "compile error invalid outside procedure" on top of the lines in the editor: "Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False Sub AddTBMenuItem() ' ' AddTBMenuItem Macro ' Macro created 13/07/2007 by malcolm harrison ' End Sub Sub Autoopen() ' ' Autoopen Macro ' Macro created 14/07/2007 by malcolm harrison ' Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Sub Autonew() ' ' Autonew Macro ' Macro created 14/07/2007 by malcolm harrison ' Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Sub AddTBToolbarItem() ' ' AddTBToolbarItem Macro ' Macro created 14/07/2007 by malcolm harrison ' End Sub" Please advise further. Thanks "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... OK, I will take another look at it ![]() -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: Graham, See my effort below, which constitutes a description of the process I have gone through on my PC, which I would find pretty fail-safe. Images of the program I find double-edged: they can be helpful, but if they don't match exactly what I see on the screen as I go through, I get anxious that maybe you are talking about a different version of the program or I am not using mine correctly. So I tend to mistrust images. A talk-through I find better. A talk-through and images might be better. Your call Open Word Click on Tools/Macro - then on Macros This brings up a box headed 'Macros'' In that box, at the top, where it says 'Macro' name, a name will already be there. You have to delete that in readiness to put in the new name, (as to which, see below). To do this, select the name and click the 'delete' button on your keyboard. In the name space that is now empty type the word 'autoopen' (no hyphen) (nothing you are asked in this guide to type in is typed in including the quotation marks: they are there to tell you these are the words to be typed in) Towards the bottom of the Macros box, right click on 'Macros in.' This brings up a drop-down menu. In that menu, click on 'Normal.dot (global template)'. To the right of the box, click on 'Create' The box then disappears and the macro editor appears, which is headed 'Microsoft Visual Basic - Normal'. This is in two sections, the one on the right being the editing box. This will have lines of text already in it Within this editing box, above the line that says 'End sub', type in the line 'Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False' In the toolbar at top of the editor, click on the 'Save' symbol In the same toolbar, click on 'File' and then 'Close and return to Microsoft Word' You are now finished "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... You are not creating a 'Wings' macro, you are creating an autonew macro and an autoopen macro. Assuming that you have not previously created any macros with these names, copy the following into your vba editor (the illustrations on the web site should match your version of Word) Sub AutoNew() Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Sub AutoOpen Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Click the save button on the vba editor toolbar and close the vba editor. You will find on the web site an expanded use of these auto macros to take care of those issues where Word will not retain the settings. if you use any of those then you add in the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to those macros rather than create new macros with the same names. Macros are fairly straightforward. They are simply instructions to operate Word functions. I don't see how I could have made their implementation any simpler than on the web site http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm but if you can think of anything that would make it easier for beginners, then by all means let me know and I will see what can be done. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I can't make head nor tail of the alleged 'idiot's guide. Much of it does not appear in my use of Word, so I have to guess. That takes me so far. I create a 'Wings' macro. This takes me into MS Virtual Basic with some lines already there. Then I paste the line supplied in the email over those lines. This leaves me with the line, and only that. Then what? I can't save the line, as I don't know where it would be saved to, if anywhere. As for auto entries, I can't see any or any links to or anything to do with auto entries. So how do I get the line into an auto entry, etc. as advised. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#26
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Thanks, Doug. This appears to have done the trick.
"Doug Robbins - Word MVP" wrote in message ... Delete the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False before Sub AddTBMenuItem() as it is outside of a procedure (Sub - End Sub) -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "Xylophone" wrote in message ... I now find that when I open a Word doc (but not Word), the first thing I get is the macro editor, with the error message: "compile error invalid outside procedure" on top of the lines in the editor: "Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False Sub AddTBMenuItem() ' ' AddTBMenuItem Macro ' Macro created 13/07/2007 by malcolm harrison ' End Sub Sub Autoopen() ' ' Autoopen Macro ' Macro created 14/07/2007 by malcolm harrison ' Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Sub Autonew() ' ' Autonew Macro ' Macro created 14/07/2007 by malcolm harrison ' Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Sub AddTBToolbarItem() ' ' AddTBToolbarItem Macro ' Macro created 14/07/2007 by malcolm harrison ' End Sub" Please advise further. Thanks "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... OK, I will take another look at it ![]() -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: Graham, See my effort below, which constitutes a description of the process I have gone through on my PC, which I would find pretty fail-safe. Images of the program I find double-edged: they can be helpful, but if they don't match exactly what I see on the screen as I go through, I get anxious that maybe you are talking about a different version of the program or I am not using mine correctly. So I tend to mistrust images. A talk-through I find better. A talk-through and images might be better. Your call Open Word Click on Tools/Macro - then on Macros This brings up a box headed 'Macros'' In that box, at the top, where it says 'Macro' name, a name will already be there. You have to delete that in readiness to put in the new name, (as to which, see below). To do this, select the name and click the 'delete' button on your keyboard. In the name space that is now empty type the word 'autoopen' (no hyphen) (nothing you are asked in this guide to type in is typed in including the quotation marks: they are there to tell you these are the words to be typed in) Towards the bottom of the Macros box, right click on 'Macros in.' This brings up a drop-down menu. In that menu, click on 'Normal.dot (global template)'. To the right of the box, click on 'Create' The box then disappears and the macro editor appears, which is headed 'Microsoft Visual Basic - Normal'. This is in two sections, the one on the right being the editing box. This will have lines of text already in it Within this editing box, above the line that says 'End sub', type in the line 'Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False' In the toolbar at top of the editor, click on the 'Save' symbol In the same toolbar, click on 'File' and then 'Close and return to Microsoft Word' You are now finished "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... You are not creating a 'Wings' macro, you are creating an autonew macro and an autoopen macro. Assuming that you have not previously created any macros with these names, copy the following into your vba editor (the illustrations on the web site should match your version of Word) Sub AutoNew() Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Sub AutoOpen Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False End Sub Click the save button on the vba editor toolbar and close the vba editor. You will find on the web site an expanded use of these auto macros to take care of those issues where Word will not retain the settings. if you use any of those then you add in the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to those macros rather than create new macros with the same names. Macros are fairly straightforward. They are simply instructions to operate Word functions. I don't see how I could have made their implementation any simpler than on the web site http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm but if you can think of anything that would make it easier for beginners, then by all means let me know and I will see what can be done. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I can't make head nor tail of the alleged 'idiot's guide. Much of it does not appear in my use of Word, so I have to guess. That takes me so far. I create a 'Wings' macro. This takes me into MS Virtual Basic with some lines already there. Then I paste the line supplied in the email over those lines. This leaves me with the line, and only that. Then what? I can't save the line, as I don't know where it would be saved to, if anywhere. As for auto entries, I can't see any or any links to or anything to do with auto entries. So how do I get the line into an auto entry, etc. as advised. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#27
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Approximately 1300 people a month view that page [...]
FWIW, I refer people to http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm so often that I don't even have to look it up; I know it by heart. There is only one more such link, namely http://www.shaunakelly.com/word/numb...Numbering.html. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... The article I referred to is one I wrote myself. Approximately 1300 people a month view that page - and only rarely has anyone provided any feedback to the effect that it is difficult to understand. Where the criticism has been valid, I have made changes to cover those criticisms. I have also recently added alternative illustration to show where Word 2007 differs from the earlier versions. I said in my original reply "add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template." I then pointed you to my web page where autonew and autoopen macros are explained as well as how to implement the use of vba code posted in newsgroup forums. I also have a page on my web site explaining how to use Norton Ghost in pictures that a child should be able to understand. Hopefully mine was not the page you were referring to ![]() -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: Thanks, Suzanne. The article mentioned autoopen and autonew but did not say these are the names you give to the macros you create in the editor. I have now done so thanks to you. I have just come away from a research committee where we were much exercised by the lack of use of plain English in documentation. A moment's thought would tell the author of the article to which Graham refers that it does not explain what it sets out to explain to an idiot. What didn't the author simply run his draft past an idiot, or a few idiots. I recall the instructions I struggled with in the case of Norton Ghost, where to me they were literally incomprehensible. The guy who wrote them would no doubt be offended by that, and express surprise that anyone should think that. He understands and he has expressed his understanding. What he did not do is express it in the language of the ordinary person who does not understand. That after all is the purpose of instructions. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... AFAIK, the Visual Basic Editor has not changed for Word 2007. It seems to me that Graham's instructions are very clear. You have already managed to create your macro and get to the VBE, where I'm assuming you're seeing this: Sub Wings() ' ' Wings Macro ' Macro created date by user ' End Sub You paste the VBA code you were given above End Sub, then click the Save button on the VBE toolbar. You don't have to choose where to save it, as Word already knows this (the module already exists, is already saved). But this really won't help you much because Wings is not the correct name of the macro; you need to create (or edit) a macro named AutoNew and one called AutoRun. If you didn't find this information in Graham's article, then you did not read all of it because there is a section toward the end titled "Auto... macros" that gives illustrations of several macros similar to the one you're trying to create. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... I can't make head nor tail of the alleged 'idiot's guide. Much of it does not appear in my use of Word, so I have to guess. That takes me so far. I create a 'Wings' macro. This takes me into MS Virtual Basic with some lines already there. Then I paste the line supplied in the email over those lines. This leaves me with the the line, and only that. Then what? I can't save the line, as I don't know where it would be saved to, if anywhere. As for auto entries, I can't see any or any links to or anything to do with auto entries. So how do I get the line into an auto entry, etc. as advised. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
#28
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I checked the page and all the issues raised were already covered, however I
have amended some parts to further aid clarification. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Stefan Blom wrote: Approximately 1300 people a month view that page [...] FWIW, I refer people to http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm so often that I don't even have to look it up; I know it by heart. There is only one more such link, namely http://www.shaunakelly.com/word/numb...Numbering.html. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... The article I referred to is one I wrote myself. Approximately 1300 people a month view that page - and only rarely has anyone provided any feedback to the effect that it is difficult to understand. Where the criticism has been valid, I have made changes to cover those criticisms. I have also recently added alternative illustration to show where Word 2007 differs from the earlier versions. I said in my original reply "add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template." I then pointed you to my web page where autonew and autoopen macros are explained as well as how to implement the use of vba code posted in newsgroup forums. I also have a page on my web site explaining how to use Norton Ghost in pictures that a child should be able to understand. Hopefully mine was not the page you were referring to ![]() -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: Thanks, Suzanne. The article mentioned autoopen and autonew but did not say these are the names you give to the macros you create in the editor. I have now done so thanks to you. I have just come away from a research committee where we were much exercised by the lack of use of plain English in documentation. A moment's thought would tell the author of the article to which Graham refers that it does not explain what it sets out to explain to an idiot. What didn't the author simply run his draft past an idiot, or a few idiots. I recall the instructions I struggled with in the case of Norton Ghost, where to me they were literally incomprehensible. The guy who wrote them would no doubt be offended by that, and express surprise that anyone should think that. He understands and he has expressed his understanding. What he did not do is express it in the language of the ordinary person who does not understand. That after all is the purpose of instructions. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... AFAIK, the Visual Basic Editor has not changed for Word 2007. It seems to me that Graham's instructions are very clear. You have already managed to create your macro and get to the VBE, where I'm assuming you're seeing this: Sub Wings() ' ' Wings Macro ' Macro created date by user ' End Sub You paste the VBA code you were given above End Sub, then click the Save button on the VBE toolbar. You don't have to choose where to save it, as Word already knows this (the module already exists, is already saved). But this really won't help you much because Wings is not the correct name of the macro; you need to create (or edit) a macro named AutoNew and one called AutoRun. If you didn't find this information in Graham's article, then you did not read all of it because there is a section toward the end titled "Auto... macros" that gives illustrations of several macros similar to the one you're trying to create. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... I can't make head nor tail of the alleged 'idiot's guide. Much of it does not appear in my use of Word, so I have to guess. That takes me so far. I create a 'Wings' macro. This takes me into MS Virtual Basic with some lines already there. Then I paste the line supplied in the email over those lines. This leaves me with the the line, and only that. Then what? I can't save the line, as I don't know where it would be saved to, if anywhere. As for auto entries, I can't see any or any links to or anything to do with auto entries. So how do I get the line into an auto entry, etc. as advised. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Okay, let's back up. I agree that it would not have been possible to know that the http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/AppErrors/MissingMenusEtc.htm article applies to Word 2003. It was written for (IIRC) Word 2000 and has not been updated recently, but the principles in it apply to all versions of Word (even, I suppose, Word 2007, even though it doesn't have "menus" per se). As for the "Idiot's Guide," it is not about *creating* macros but about how to *install* a macro you have been given, which is your situation. Read it carefully; it's just telling you where to paste the VBA you've been handed. There is another article on the same subject at http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/MacrosVBA/CreateAMacro.htm, but I think Graham's article is clearer (though certainly not as concise). If you gave up too early on Graham's article, you may not have reached the "Auto... macros" section toward the end, which explains how to create the AutoNew and AutoOpen macros he suggests creating. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Suzanne, Many thanks. It will be frustrating for you guys. I respect and admire what you do. I am not some geek, biting my nails in the corner. I would have not have known from reading it that the registry article applies to Word 2003. I shall now follow it to the letter. As for the idiot's guide to macros, this tells you how to create a macro. Great. What it doesn't tell you is what to put in the macro (kindly been provided in my case). Hence my aversion to macros: in the absence of such assistance (and where else might I might find that?), they are totally useless to me. The same applies to DOS. Many's the time I have been pilloried for not understanding DOS, yet I have never ever found any document that explains it in ordinary language, so how am I expected to understand it? There was a little bit about it in a Windows Manual I got many years ago. Perhaps the truth is that you either 'get' these things or you don't. I have 4 degrees and am a successful person. But I tend to be literal minded, so that things of a technical nature usually have to spelled out to me. There we go. Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The link that Stefan gave applies to all versions (with appropriate modification of the version number in the Registry key name), and Graham provides complete instructions on how to use his macro in the article he referred to. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Xylophone" wrote in message ... Stefan, your link makes no specific reference to Word 2003, and Graham, macros are a no-go area for me: incomprehensible, I'm afraid. "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... Word 2003 particularly has an irriatting habit of randomly losing some settings from Tools Options. The easiest workaround is to force the settings you want in auto macros. In this case, add the line Options.AllowClickAndTypeMouse = False to both an autoopen and an autonew macro in the normal template. See http://www.gmayor.com/installing_macro.htm -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Xylophone wrote: I use Word 2003 on a XP machine. Every time I open a new Word doc, I get 'wings' attached to the cursor which drives me mad. I can get rid of them by going into Options/Edit and unclicking Click and Type. But they come back when I open the next new doc, when Click and Type is ticked again. How can I get unclicking Click and Type to stick, so that this problem is solved permanently? I imagine a registry adjustment would do the trick. Thanks. |
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