Guess I'm in the right spot. -)
I've got 2 publications.
One is a Word Doc I'm creating and editing.
One is a HTML doc which contains the source
material (no I'm not plagiarising) -)
I cut 'n paste from the HTML into the Word and then set
about creating / updating all the hyperlinks (at this stage)
I guess you'd really define them as bookmarks but ...
How do I copy a valid, correct, doc-internal, hyperlink and
paste it to all subsequent references of the document position.?
The only way at the moment seems to be tedious -
correct the refx.,
correct the refx.,
ad nauseum
Any pointers will do. Thanks
----- Original Message -----
From: "Bazza" <>
Newsgroups: microsoft.public.word.web.authoring
Sent: Saturday, June 12, 2004 12:06 AM
Subject: Hyperlinks and bookmarks
> Guess I'm in the right spot. -)
>
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
>
> Any pointers will do. Thanks
Bazza,
What is the "end-use" for the Word Doc? Will it be local or
shared? Is it your desire to retain the capability to return that Doc to its
Word formatting.
I'm assuming your copying the html page from either a different source or
different directory structure? Is that correct?
If So create or edit the html page links once your have moved to the new
folder destination (also have duplicated the directory structure) and BEFORE
copying the links into Word. (There are multiple tools for doing Find and
Replace on html pages.) Then draw the corrected links into Word.
The only time I personally use Word in local-links is in some index pages of
a duplicated directory structure. Even then, these files are not intended
for sharing, as a result, I'm unable to provide any feedback on how these
indexes would appear on a non-local directory structure, nor do I have a
desire to query into an issue unnecessarily. The pages currently function as
I desire, even when I do my monthly back-ups to CD's.
The only reason I even use Word for this index thingy, is because ALL the
sub-docs and sub-doc directories contain Word docs. Using a index created
from Word in root-of that directory structure, is because it's convenient.