| 1. |
Solve : word doc attacment question? |
|
Answer» Hi guys, sorry to trouble the forum with such a novice question, but IM a little older and unfortunately got behind the wave and left behind(lol). If you have Word set to show spelling mistakes with a red squiggle underneath, that's what you'll see. What I am trying to say is that the red squiggles are not "in" the document, they are added by Word because of your settings.Yes, but once he's told Word to Ignore, or Ignore All, for a particular mistake, and saved that file, those mistakes should not appear again when that file is reopened. And, he did say: Quote I have gone through the document a half dozen times "telling" word to ignore the "error" ... Quote from: Salmon Trout on April 25, 2013, 12:25:49 PM It seems you can do this: Tools / Options / Spelling & Grammar... check "Hide spelling errors in this document" and "Hide grammatical errors in this document" (Then click OK). If you check these boxes, only the present document is affected, and spelling errors will be hidden on any machine on which it is opened, regardless of the Spelling & Grammar Options settings. I just tried this out... I opened MS Word 2003 on my main PC and created a document with some spelling and grammar errors. These were highlighted by Word in red and green respectively. Then I went to Tools, Options, Spelling & Grammar and checked "Hide Spelling Errors in this document" and "Hide grammatical errors in this document". Then I saved the document on a network drive and went to another PC and opened the same document. The errors were not marked. However, in the second Word session, I could uncheck those boxes, and the markings were again visible. I then went back to the first PC and emailed the document as an attachment to a colleague and got her to open it in Word and it was the same. Errors hidden, but easily revealed. My take on this: better to avoid making errors in the first place, than worry about hiding them, because a sufficiently determined recipient is going to notice them whatever you do. (There are some people in this world who can spot spelling mistakes without the help of a computer program.) Also: beware saving the document with all the editing history! I bet this has lost more job chances than any other mistake! Quote from: stephkyle7 on April 25, 2013, 10:15:02 AM The format of the resume has a lot of "bullet" type points and word Identifies them as Fragments.That doesn't make sense to me. Word doesn't care about punctuation if you use the Bullets tool to create bullets. Did you use Word's Bullets tool or did you just use your own technique to make bullets? I'm also wondering whether you used a resume/CV template for your resume. Not using one of the templates and just trying to create a resume from a regular blank Word document is the hard way to create a resume. yes, I failed to "tell" word I was using Bullets. When I had in the past utilized there formatting, they put the little "dots" infront of the bullets. As I have revised the document over the years I chose to eliminate their "dot" format.Additionally, there are several proper names for institutions and places that are not in the word thesaurus, so while I completely undrstand the idea that it would make sense to just comply with whatever "word" wants,in some cases it isnt really possible to make "word" happy(lol). Im not thinking that the HR department would be interested in parsing the document for errors regarding dangling partciples and the like, but if it opens with all the color,it might appear so flawed as to cause a sincere concern to the viewer. I will try the "hide" errors approach...The nature of the errors isnt spelling,that I did ensure, but trying to comply with what "word" wants me to do, is further compounded by the fact that even when I accept their corrections,and save the document under a new name ,when I open it as an attachment sent to my dupe email account Word still identifies the same fragments and such as errors.So, do you actually have a visible bullet? Were you trying to avoid using one of Word's bullet images to save space, or what? By the way, Word PROVIDES many alternative images for bullets. You can even create one and use it. Again: Quote I'm also wondering whether you used a resume/CV template for your resume. Not using one of the templates and just trying to create a resume from a regular blank Word document is the hard way to create a resume. |
|