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In Word 2003, calculations can be placed into a table cell in at least 3 ways:
1. On the Insert dropdown as insert field and select =(Formula) (Note: this does not insert a form field, just the code) 2. On the Table dropdown by selecting 'Formula' (which does insert a form field) 3. On the Forms Toolbar by selecting 'Text Form Field' and from the dropdown, change the definition to 'Calculation'. Why three different ways of adding a calculation? Are there instances where one is preferable over another? Do the differences affect the manner in which the calculation is handled (i.e., form field vs no form field)? I can see that the two methods that actually drop in a form field provide an opportunity to add a bookmark that the first method does not..... Does anyone have an explanation or is there an explanation? best regards - Lenny |
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