Prev: Shane Carpenter
Next: Working with Excel charts in Word
From: Joseph Talbott on 23 Mar 2010 11:40 I am experimenting with creating a master document from several subdocuments using the IncludeText code. So far, as long as I don't mess up the path, it works well. My question is this: When I list each IncludeText field on a separate line in the "master" document, the resulting imported text includes the paragraph return at the end of the line with the field code and this means that I end up with a double return between subdocuments. The only way I have found to work around this is to, essentially, place all of the field codes in the same paragraph. It works, but for a document with a lot of subdocuments, it is very messy. I tried inserting a manual return at the end of the field code but that messed up the style of the first line of the following subdocument. Is there a way to place the each field code on a separate line (paragraph?) without bringing in the extra return with the imported text?
From: macropod on 23 Mar 2010 17:34 Hi Joseph, If you bookmark all of each source document except for the final paragraph mark, you can then add the bookmark name to the INCLUDETEXT field and Word will import all except that troublesome last paragraph mark. See Word's help file for further details. Note: if it makes things any easier, all the source documents can have the same bookmark names. -- Cheers macropod [Microsoft MVP - Word] "Joseph Talbott" <JosephTalbott(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:938AA9AF-1D85-4389-A77B-8013B963FA64(a)microsoft.com... >I am experimenting with creating a master document from several subdocuments > using the IncludeText code. So far, as long as I don't mess up the path, it > works well. My question is this: When I list each IncludeText field on a > separate line in the "master" document, the resulting imported text includes > the paragraph return at the end of the line with the field code and this > means that I end up with a double return between subdocuments. The only way I > have found to work around this is to, essentially, place all of the field > codes in the same paragraph. It works, but for a document with a lot of > subdocuments, it is very messy. I tried inserting a manual return at the end > of the field code but that messed up the style of the first line of the > following subdocument. Is there a way to place the each field code on a > separate line (paragraph?) without bringing in the extra return with the > imported text?
From: Joseph Talbott on 23 Mar 2010 18:23 Thanks for the reply. I hadn't tried the bookmark option yet and that may just be the ticket. I certainly understand about the final paragraph mark. Before I figured that one out some of my documents were quite literally possessed. I have also used the Insert File option but that really places a lot of "junk" on the front page when there are many subdocuments. Joe "macropod" wrote: > Hi Joseph, > > If you bookmark all of each source document except for the final paragraph mark, you can then add the bookmark name to the > INCLUDETEXT field and Word will import all except that troublesome last paragraph mark. See Word's help file for further details. > > Note: if it makes things any easier, all the source documents can have the same bookmark names. > > -- > Cheers > macropod > [Microsoft MVP - Word] > > > "Joseph Talbott" <JosephTalbott(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:938AA9AF-1D85-4389-A77B-8013B963FA64(a)microsoft.com... > >I am experimenting with creating a master document from several subdocuments > > using the IncludeText code. So far, as long as I don't mess up the path, it > > works well. My question is this: When I list each IncludeText field on a > > separate line in the "master" document, the resulting imported text includes > > the paragraph return at the end of the line with the field code and this > > means that I end up with a double return between subdocuments. The only way I > > have found to work around this is to, essentially, place all of the field > > codes in the same paragraph. It works, but for a document with a lot of > > subdocuments, it is very messy. I tried inserting a manual return at the end > > of the field code but that messed up the style of the first line of the > > following subdocument. Is there a way to place the each field code on a > > separate line (paragraph?) without bringing in the extra return with the > > imported text? > > . >
|
Pages: 1 Prev: Shane Carpenter Next: Working with Excel charts in Word |