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Reply to: MS Word - ToC

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Previously on "MS Word - ToC"

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  • Bellona
    replied
    Originally posted by SteelyDan View Post
    Just to update, this worked superbly, so thanks again.
    The Word doc, now with diagrams inserted via paste 'special' as picture enhanced metafile, is now about the same size as a pdf!
    Been doing this all these years and still learning!
    Thanks for letting us know it worked
    So glad to have helped - being on the bench makes me feel bit useless sometimes so it was great to be able to do something useful for someone.

    Now if you, or anyone else, wants to help me with my Acrobat problem,( see thread a bit lower down)that would make me feel even better

    Leave a comment:


  • SteelyDan
    replied
    Originally posted by Bellona View Post
    Sometimes when you hit rtn after the heading, the next line still thinks it's in heading mode, so whatever comes next appears in the ToC - hence the tip about checking the formatting of the next line.

    Re file size - HELL YES
    By loads !

    In Visio, select copy and highlight the whole diagram ( rather than hitting copy-drawing) - this keeps size and shape better

    In word, select paste special, then choose Picture (Enhanced Metafile).

    You can then size as necessary by dragging sides / corners : this is also useful if it is a large diagram better suited to A3, as it remains readable when shrunk.

    Only downside, (2 parts), is you have to keep a track ( I do it in properties ) of which Visio diagram and version is in each doc and cross reference them so that if you need to update the diagram for the document you know which one it was - and the secnnd part is you can't edit the diagram within the document, so leave all diagrams as part of a handover so people can update docs without starting again

    Hope that helps.
    Just to update, this worked superbly, so thanks again.
    The Word doc, now with diagrams inserted via paste 'special' as picture enhanced metafile, is now about the same size as a pdf!
    Been doing this all these years and still learning!

    Leave a comment:


  • SteelyDan
    replied
    Originally posted by Bellona View Post
    Sometimes when you hit rtn after the heading, the next line still thinks it's in heading mode, so whatever comes next appears in the ToC - hence the tip about checking the formatting of the next line.

    Re file size - HELL YES
    By loads !

    In Visio, select copy and highlight the whole diagram ( rather than hitting copy-drawing) - this keeps size and shape better

    In word, select paste special, then choose Picture (Enhanced Metafile).

    You can then size as necessary by dragging sides / corners : this is also useful if it is a large diagram better suited to A3, as it remains readable when shrunk.

    Only downside, (2 parts), is you have to keep a track ( I do it in properties ) of which Visio diagram and version is in each doc and cross reference them so that if you need to update the diagram for the document you know which one it was - and the secnnd part is you can't edit the diagram within the document, so leave all diagrams as part of a handover so people can update docs without starting again

    Hope that helps.
    Superb mate, this makes perfect sense. Thanks.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bellona
    replied
    Originally posted by SteelyDan View Post
    Yes, there is a heading; I've used the 'Heading 1' in Styles from the ribbon. I insert a space after the heading (hit return key) and drop the diagram in there.

    I'll give yr suggestion a whirl tomorrow and see what occurs. Thanks for the response.

    On yr point about meta files, would this reduce the 'mb-age' size of the whole document too? For example, a full Word doc of some 50 pages is coming up as almost 70mb or something ridiculous which is maybe down to the high number of Visio diagrams, and obviously becomes difficult to upload onto SharePoint, unless I pdf it which shrinks it down majorly.
    Sometimes when you hit rtn after the heading, the next line still thinks it's in heading mode, so whatever comes next appears in the ToC - hence the tip about checking the formatting of the next line.

    Re file size - HELL YES
    By loads !

    In Visio, select copy and highlight the whole diagram ( rather than hitting copy-drawing) - this keeps size and shape better

    In word, select paste special, then choose Picture (Enhanced Metafile).

    You can then size as necessary by dragging sides / corners : this is also useful if it is a large diagram better suited to A3, as it remains readable when shrunk.

    Only downside, (2 parts), is you have to keep a track ( I do it in properties ) of which Visio diagram and version is in each doc and cross reference them so that if you need to update the diagram for the document you know which one it was - and the secnnd part is you can't edit the diagram within the document, so leave all diagrams as part of a handover so people can update docs without starting again

    Hope that helps.

    Leave a comment:


  • SteelyDan
    replied
    Originally posted by Bellona View Post
    Is there a header or heading on the page with the diagrams ?
    If not, insert one using header/heading formatting and then that should be the only thing that appears.
    Check that the place you are putting the Visio diagrams has "normal" or "body text" formatting, and insert the diagrams as enhanced meta file rather than a Visio object

    Check the formatting of the text that is appearing in the ToC spuriously to check it is normal or body text also

    If still stuck, and you are happy to send it, pm me and I'll try and fix

    HTH
    Yes, there is a heading; I've used the 'Heading 1' in Styles from the ribbon. I insert a space after the heading (hit return key) and drop the diagram in there.

    I'll give yr suggestion a whirl tomorrow and see what occurs. Thanks for the response.

    On yr point about meta files, would this reduce the 'mb-age' size of the whole document too? For example, a full Word doc of some 50 pages is coming up as almost 70mb or something ridiculous which is maybe down to the high number of Visio diagrams, and obviously becomes difficult to upload onto SharePoint, unless I pdf it which shrinks it down majorly.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bellona
    replied
    Is there a header or heading on the page with the diagrams ?
    If not, insert one using header/heading formatting and then that should be the only thing that appears.
    Check that the place you are putting the Visio diagrams has "normal" or "body text" formatting, and insert the diagrams as enhanced meta file rather than a Visio object

    Check the formatting of the text that is appearing in the ToC spuriously to check it is normal or body text also

    If still stuck, and you are happy to send it, pm me and I'll try and fix

    HTH

    Leave a comment:


  • SteelyDan
    started a topic MS Word - ToC

    MS Word - ToC

    I'm putting some business docs together using MS Word, which contain some Visio process diagrams, but when I update the Table of Contents, it pulls the diagrams into the ToC, so I have to then manually delete them. That's fine, but it's a bit of a 'nause' and don't think it should be happening.

    I'm sure my spacing between the page header text & diagrams are ok, but any ideas how I can stop them being pulled into the contents page? It also pulls in some of the text from the doc, but the diagram issue is my main problem. Cheers.
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