saving in publisher 2000

P

papeco

I have been trying to download my project on a cd to take to a company for
copies but after download I can not open due to it says it is a readable file
only. I have gone back and unchecked the readable file only and still am not
able to read please can someone help with this?
 
E

Ed Bennett

papeco said:
I have been trying to download my project on a cd to take to a company for
copies but after download I can not open due to it says it is a readable file
only. I have gone back and unchecked the readable file only and still am not
able to read please can someone help with this?

You cannot save files directly to a CD of any type. Save to your local
hard drive, and then burn to CD using recording software such as Nero,
Roxio, or the Windows built-in CD burning tool.
 
J

John G

Ed Bennett said:
You cannot save files directly to a CD of any type. Save to your local
hard drive, and then burn to CD using recording software such as Nero,
Roxio, or the Windows built-in CD burning tool.


And to add to what Ed said,
You must copy from the CD to the local hard disk and change the
attribute from Read Only to Read/Write before you can use the file.
 
P

papeco

I always save directly to my hard drive and then try to download to cd with
Nero. I have gone back and unchecked the read only and agin tried to download
with the same results.
 
J

John G

What does "readable file only" mean ? I do not undeerstand unless your
native language is not English.
John G
 
P

papeco

Okay, Dokay, John G., Somehow I must have insulted you for you to come on so
negative with my question. I do apologize. Readable file is a format that
some programs use for some files. That is the extent of my knowledge on this
subject. But to help you understand what this is I collected some info by
looking on the web I found this explanation that might help you: A computer
file is a piece of arbitrary information, or resource for storing
information, that is available to a computer program and is usually based on
some kind of durable storage. A file is durable in the sense that it remains
available for programs to use after the current program has finished.
Computer files can be considered as the modern counterpart of the files of
printed documents that traditionally existed in offices and libraries, which
are the source of the term.
So if you do not have an answer for me that is okay 'cause this is a very
perplexing situation even for me. But I sure hope someone can help me with
this problem I have. I have tried various ways of saving to no avail. Thank
you all for your feed back and I hope someone has an answer for me. Please
no more insults or sarcasm I really need this info for my business.
 
J

John G

I am sorry if you got so upset because you are unable to answer my
question.

Any file is readable if it is not damaged but it is not necessarily
understandable by a particular program.

Please tell us the English message that you are getting.

In a lot of years (40) in this business I have not seen a message saying
a file is "Unreadable".

Data errors of various forms, YES, but if you cannot give us the real
error message then how can we help you?

I do not think I was NEGATIVE. I just asked you what UNREADABLE meant,
because it is not a common error message.

It really helps to quote the actual message and the circumstances such
as the file extension etc.

Send me the file to sragrif at ozemail dot com dot au and I will try to
help you.
--
John G

Wot's Your Real Problem?


papeco said:
Okay, Dokay, John G., Somehow I must have insulted you for you to come
on so
negative with my question. I do apologize. Readable file is a format
that
some programs use for some files. That is the extent of my knowledge
on this
subject. But to help you understand what this is I collected some
info by
looking on the web I found this explanation that might help you: A
computer
file is a piece of arbitrary information, or resource for storing
information, that is available to a computer program and is usually
based on
some kind of durable storage. A file is durable in the sense that it
remains
available for programs to use after the current program has finished.
Computer files can be considered as the modern counterpart of the
files of
printed documents that traditionally existed in offices and libraries,
which
are the source of the term.
So if you do not have an answer for me that is okay 'cause this is a
very
perplexing situation even for me. But I sure hope someone can help me
with
this problem I have. I have tried various ways of saving to no avail.
Thank
you all for your feed back and I hope someone has an answer for me.
Please
no more insults or sarcasm I really need this info for my business.
 
M

Mike Williams

I have been trying to download my project on a cd to take to a
company for copies but after download I can not open due to it
says it is a readable file only. I have gone back and unchecked
the readable file only and still am not able to read please can
someone help with this?

As others here have already said, you really need to tell us *exactly* what
error message you are getting (the exact wording of the message) and also
under what circumstances the error occurs (in other words, exactly what you
did that caused the error message to appear). It also helps if you tell us
which version of Windows you are using (different versions behave
differently in some respects regarding files on a CD).

Computer files have various "flags" associated with them. These flags tell
the operating system what can and cannot be done with a specific file. When
you write a file to a CD the system normally sets the "read only" flag to
True to indicate that the file can be "read" but it cannot be "written to".
When you then insert that CD into another computer you can "open" the CD (by
double clicking your "My Computer" icon and then double clicking the CD
drive) and you can then open the .pub file by double clicking it, which will
cause it to open up in Publisher (if Publisher is in fact installed on that
machine). Publisher will quite happily open the file, but because its "read
only" flag is set it will not be able to write to that file. In other words,
if you select File / Save in Publisher you will get an error message telling
you that it cannot write to the file. The exact wording of this message
probably varies between different versions of Publisher, but it is
effectively telling you that it cannot write to the file because it's "read
only" flag is set.

You can solve this in two ways. One way is a to "clear" the "read only" flag
of the file (see the next paragraph for more details on this) and the other
way is to save a new copy of the file under a different name by using the
Publisher menu File / Save As (instead of File / Save). If you use "Save As"
you will be able to specify a new name for the file (or perhaps use the same
name but place it in a different drive and / or directory, which is
something I would not advise). Using "Save As" will result in you having two
copies of the file (the original on the CD and another on your main drive).
These two copies may be the same or they may be different, depending on
whether you made any changes to the document in Publisher before you used
Save As. The other way (the way I would suggest) is to simply copy the file
from the CD onto your main drive, as explained in the following paragraph.

To get normal full "read and write" access to the original file file you
need to "clear" its "read only" flag. You can do this by "right clicking"
the file and selecting "Properties" and then removing the tick from the
"read only" box. However, if you attempt to do this to the actual copy of
the file on the CD you will get another error message. This is because the
"read only" flag is stored in the actual file, and Windows cannot change
that status because it physically cannot overwrite the file on the CD.

To solve this problem you need to copy the file from the CD onto your
computer. The easiest way to do this is to make the "drive window" smaller
than the display (use the standard maximize / normalize button at the top
right) and then "drag" the file out onto your desktop, so that you now have
two copies of the file (one still on the CD and another on your desktop). If
you are using WinXP then the act of doing this will automatically cause the
"read only" flag to be cleared in the file on the desktop, but if you are
using Windows 98 you will need to clear it yourself (right click the file on
the desktop and select Properties and remove the tick from the "read only"
box).

Does this solve your problem for you? Print this message so that you can
refer to it while working on the file. If it does not solve your problem
then post again with *exact* details of all of the error messages you are
getting and the *exact* circumstances under which you get them.

Maureen
 
P

papeco

thank you, Mike. I have no idea why it worked but it did. I saved it in a
different file and then saved to desk to and burned it the shortcuts on desk
top are wht worked. Thanks again. But it really shouldn't have been this
complicated. I've never had this problem before in any other programs. Learn
something new every day.
 

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