Udskrivning af tilføjelse alene uden hele dokument

H

Hannah

Jeg har oprettet og udskrevet en mængde skemaer i word. Jeg har nu en
tilføjelse til skemaerne, og vil gerne vide om det er muligt at udskrive
denne tilføjelse (og kun den) på de i forvejen udskrevne dokumenter?. Altså
uden resten af dokumentet, eller er jeg nød til at udskrive hele dokumentet
med tilføjelse på ny.?
 
V

Viktor Erdélyi

قال قيادي بارز ÙÙŠ جماعة الإخوان المسلمين الأردنية إن السلطات الإسرائيلية
اعتقلت اثنين من أبنائه أثناء زيارتهم للضÙØ© الغربية منتص٠"إرهابيين" بعد
محاصرة منزل ÙÙŠ مدينة كركوك شمال العراق، ÙÙŠ الأثناء نجا قاض عراقي من محاولة
Na, I understand exactly as much of what you wrote, as you understand from
the above. English please, that's an English discussion group...
 
S

Suzanne S. Barnhill

But there's a good chance that Stefan Blom can answer a question in
Norwegian even though he's Swedish.
 
S

Stefan Blom

Well, this was a tricky one... (The difficult part is the word "tilføjelse"
which I don't quite understand.) My interpretation is that the OP wants to
print part of the document (pages that were added later), as opposed to
re-printing the whole document. Only the OP can tell if I understood her
correctly. :)

--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP


in message
 
S

Stefan Blom

Suzanne S. Barnhill said:
Judging from http://office.microsoft.com/da-dk/word/HA011268771030.aspx, I
obviously guessed wrong on the language, too. Googling for "tilføjelse"
brings up lots of intriguing-looking articles!

Well, it *is* difficult to tell the difference between written Norwegian and
written Danish (at least it is for me :) ).

FWIW, both languages can however easily be distinguished from Swedish,
because we don't use æ or ø (instead we write ä and ö, respectively).
The English translation provided by
http://www.frasi.net/dizionari/danese-inglese/default.asp?vocabolo=tilf%F8jelse
is "chemical addition." Perhaps a chemical formula or equation? Or the
subscript on an element in same?

Good detective work on your part... <g> It's a very good idea to search the
Office web site.

However, I think this confirms my initial thoughts: it is an "addition,"
probably nothing to do with Chemistry, though, but rather an addition of
content.
 
S

Suzanne S. Barnhill

Well, I just googled--didn't search the Office website specifically. Of
course, it didn't help that everything I found was in Danish. <g>

My first thought re: "addition" was that it might be "appendix," but I
didn't find any particular support for that interpretation.
 

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