D
DSG
I have just gone through John McGhie's procedure to clean up corrupt
documents. Surprisingly, I ended up with what I was promised (beautiful),
except for one format.
I used copious endnotes throughout the document, where the endnote
references were formatted as bolded and superscripted as they come from the
menu. However, Once I made the final document by reducing the working
document to no formatting at all and dropping it into the new template, it
all just came out beautiful, except that the end note references were all
plain, default paragraph fonted (no bolded, or superscripted style).
Since they were already formatted in the original document, and when the
bold, superscripted reference shows as 'end note reference' and the style
bar showed the endnote reference designation when reference is selected,
(and I also transferred the endnote reference designation to the new
template) it would seem that the reclaimed document would have honored that
format. Why didn't it work?
Windows XP Pro SP2, Office 2000, SP3
DSG
documents. Surprisingly, I ended up with what I was promised (beautiful),
except for one format.
I used copious endnotes throughout the document, where the endnote
references were formatted as bolded and superscripted as they come from the
menu. However, Once I made the final document by reducing the working
document to no formatting at all and dropping it into the new template, it
all just came out beautiful, except that the end note references were all
plain, default paragraph fonted (no bolded, or superscripted style).
Since they were already formatted in the original document, and when the
bold, superscripted reference shows as 'end note reference' and the style
bar showed the endnote reference designation when reference is selected,
(and I also transferred the endnote reference designation to the new
template) it would seem that the reclaimed document would have honored that
format. Why didn't it work?
Windows XP Pro SP2, Office 2000, SP3
DSG