Changing all styles

F

Fabricator

I have come into a technical writing position at a company which has
virtually all of its technical manuals in Word. My background is in
Framemaker, so I have been learning a lot about Word in order to
survive.

These documents suffer the effects of many people going into them and
making changes, additions and deletions over a period of many years.
There seems to have been styles set up for these documents, but I find
that high percentages of the text and headers have been manually
changed [including rampant use of space bar, tab key, and returns] from
some other style by people who had little or no knowledge of styles. In
some cases they did modify styles, but had the update all feature
enabled. So there were global problems created.

The header/outline hierarchy is all over the map and very
inconsistent/nonsensical in many of the documents, which is a problem
because many of them are 60-70 pages long. A lot of the numbering
strings are messed up, too.

What I think I would like to do [and maybe I will not be using Word
terminology correctly] is create a new template, populated by correctly
formatted and desired styles, then repair documents by jettisoning the
old styles and importing the new, then going through the document and
massaging it so that everything is the right style.

I am still weak on when I want to switch templates and when I want just
to modify styles, even after reading a lot about this subject.

I have done lots of research and have gotten pretty proficient, I
think, in the correct use of styles. I am still struggling with regard
to diagnosing just how to fix some of these documents. I can change a
style in a paragraph and it affects other paragraphs, indents, and
numbering. Some of the documents almost seem corrupted to me, if that
is possible.

So, some questions.....

Have any of you ever inherited a situation like this and how did you
deal with it?

What would be the best way to totally replace all of the questionable
styles?

If you have a document associated with one template with named styles,
and you switch templates to another one with the same style names, but
different formatting for those styles, and you switch between the two
templates for a document, will that change the appearance of the
document, or will it retain the previous style formatting?

I could use any helpful thought you would care to share.... :)
 
S

Suzanne S. Barnhill

The way I handle this is as follows:

1. I print out the document as is so that I have a visual reference for how
the original creator(s) thought they wanted it to look.

2. I then make a copy of the document and change the style of ALL the text
to Body Text or Body Text First Indent (whichever will be most used in the
document).

3. I create a new empty document based on a template that has the styles,
header/footer, etc., that I plan to use.

4. I use Insert | File to insert my sanitized copy into it.

5. I go through the document tagging the headings, lists, block quotes,
etc., with the appropriate styles.

This is *relatively* simple for most novels and nonfiction books; for a
technical manual, especially one with graphics, it would be more difficult,
but it is still probably less work than trying to make sure you've changed
every paragraph to the appropriate style, not inadvertently imported
unwanted styles, etc.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA

Fabricator said:
I have come into a technical writing position at a company which has
virtually all of its technical manuals in Word. My background is in
Framemaker, so I have been learning a lot about Word in order to
survive.

These documents suffer the effects of many people going into them and
making changes, additions and deletions over a period of many years.
There seems to have been styles set up for these documents, but I find
that high percentages of the text and headers have been manually
changed [including rampant use of space bar, tab key, and returns] from
some other style by people who had little or no knowledge of styles. In
some cases they did modify styles, but had the update all feature
enabled. So there were global problems created.

The header/outline hierarchy is all over the map and very
inconsistent/nonsensical in many of the documents, which is a problem
because many of them are 60-70 pages long. A lot of the numbering
strings are messed up, too.

What I think I would like to do [and maybe I will not be using Word
terminology correctly] is create a new template, populated by correctly
formatted and desired styles, then repair documents by jettisoning the
old styles and importing the new, then going through the document and
massaging it so that everything is the right style.

I am still weak on when I want to switch templates and when I want just
to modify styles, even after reading a lot about this subject.

I have done lots of research and have gotten pretty proficient, I
think, in the correct use of styles. I am still struggling with regard
to diagnosing just how to fix some of these documents. I can change a
style in a paragraph and it affects other paragraphs, indents, and
numbering. Some of the documents almost seem corrupted to me, if that
is possible.

So, some questions.....

Have any of you ever inherited a situation like this and how did you
deal with it?

What would be the best way to totally replace all of the questionable
styles?

If you have a document associated with one template with named styles,
and you switch templates to another one with the same style names, but
different formatting for those styles, and you switch between the two
templates for a document, will that change the appearance of the
document, or will it retain the previous style formatting?

I could use any helpful thought you would care to share.... :)
 

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