Saving created files in GIF or JPG Formats

D

David

I was using a later version of Publisher at work than I
have at home (2000) and could save files in a picture
format. When, or what version, did this option become
available?

Thank you for your help.
 
J

John Inzer

David said:
I was using a later version of Publisher at work than I
have at home (2000) and could save files in a picture
format. When, or what version, did this option become
available?

Thank you for your help.
==========================================
2002
 
M

Mary Sauer

At work, you could save the file as Publisher 2000 in "files of type." 2002(XP) was
the first Publisher you could save as an image.
 
B

Brian Kvalheim - [MSFT MVP]

Hi David ([email protected]),
in the newsgroups
you posted:

|| I was using a later version of Publisher at work than I
|| have at home (2000) and could save files in a picture
|| format. When, or what version, did this option become
|| available?
||
|| Thank you for your help.


Publisher 2000
Follow these steps:

1.. Save or back up your current publication.
2.. Once the final check has been made, you are ready to save your
publication as a graphic file to send you publication electronically.
3.. Create Web site from current publication. On the File menu, click
Create Web Site from Current Publication. You will be prompted to run Design
Checker. I recommend using this option.
4.. Save your publication as a Web page. On the File menu, click Save As.
In the Save As dialog box, in the Save as type box, select Web page.
5.. Open the folder where you saved your new Web page. You will find a
..gif file for each object on your page. Each .gif file will start with an
img*.gif (such as img0.gif or img1.gif). You can rename these files if you
feel necessary.
6.. When you are ready to send your publication to others, start your
e-mail program, compose your e-mail message, and then attach the graphic
file to your message. See the hint below for a tip on how to simplify how
you can merge all the images together.
Hint If you want to make the entire page of objects and text as a .gif
image draw a 1 × 1 table that covers the entire page. Any objects, such as
text frames, pictures, or autoshapes, in this table will be converted to a
single graphic, making the entire page as one object.

From:
http://www.microsoft.com/office/previous/xp/columns/column16.asp

--
Brian Kvalheim
Microsoft Publisher MVP
http://www.publishermvps.com
~pay it forward~

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and
confers no rights.
 
E

Eric

David said:
I was using a later version of Publisher at work than I
have at home (2000) and could save files in a picture
format. When, or what version, did this option become
available?

Thank you for your help.


By the way... you can use GhostScript to create a "print to JPG"
printer so you can create JPGs from any Windows program.

I have the instructions around here somewhere. I'll post them if you
want.

Eric
 

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