How do I group multiple office documents together under one file .

E

eodtech

I'm in the military, and in the section I run for my company I have several
different office documents. Some powerpoint presentations, quite a few word
documents, and as many excel spreadsheets.

I'm used to using 2000 and grouping everything under binder, but in
bringing my work home have found that I can unbind all the files but not edit
and then regroup them.

Please help.
 
D

Don MI

eodtech said:
I'm in the military, and in the section I run for my company I have
several
different office documents. Some powerpoint presentations, quite a few
word
documents, and as many excel spreadsheets.

I'm used to using 2000 and grouping everything under binder, but in
bringing my work home have found that I can unbind all the files but not
edit
and then regroup them.

Please help.

Hopefully the documents you are bring home are not classified.

I do not understand the relation between your subject and your second
paragraph. If you want to group a number of files together, you can do so
with a application that creates *.zip files {such as Winzip and many others}
or an application that creates *pdf files such as Acrobat {and others}.

From your post, I do not understand what you are trying to accomplish
However, perhaps PaperPort may be what your are looking for {or perhaps
not}. Try:

http://www.scansoft.com/

Don
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

MS discontinued Binder after Office 2000. You'll need
to do a custom install from Office 97 or 2000 to add
MS Binder back in or else, as Don mentioned, zip
your files to carry them back to work and then
add them to a Binder.

====
I'm in the military, and in the section I run for my company I have several
different office documents. Some powerpoint presentations, quite a few word
documents, and as many excel spreadsheets.

I'm used to using 2000 and grouping everything under binder, but in
bringing my work home have found that I can unbind all the files but not edit
and then regroup them.

Please help. >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

Office 2003 Editions explained
http://www.microsoft.com/uk/office/editions.mspx
 

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