How do I combine several word files into one continuous document

N

Njdao

I'm writting a text book. All the chapters are in separate files for ease of
editing. Now I need to produce one continuous manuscript for the publishers
with page numbering, table of contents etc. I suppose I could cut and paste
all the files into one file and work from that. But there must be a more
elegant method than that.
 
D

dylane

Which version of Word are you using? In 2003 I know there is an insert file
command.

I've also used a Word add-on that makes assembling from multiple files a bit
easier. It is the boiler.zip file located on Graham Mayor's site linked to
below. This tends to make things a fair bit easier when trying to assemble
multiple files into one single document.

http://www.gmayor.com/downloads.htm

One warning, what seems like it should be "easy" and elegant, is often
anything but, and often formatting gets very screwed up. Speaking from lots
of personal experience here.

Good Luck
 
G

grammatim

In 2007 it's Insert > Object (almost at the right end, bottom of a
list) > Text From File. (Even though you're not inserting an object,
and even though it doesn't have to be "text," and it's not "from" the
file, it's the whole file.)
 
S

Strawberry Blunt

Njdao said:
I'm writting a text book. All the chapters are in separate files for ease of
editing. Now I need to produce one continuous manuscript for the publishers
with page numbering, table of contents etc. I suppose I could cut and paste
all the files into one file and work from that. But there must be a more
elegant method than that.
 
R

rakesh

I tried this plugin, it works good. but i am unable to retain the same page
numbers. is there a workaround for this? please advice.
 
G

Graham Mayor

You would have to reset the page numbering to the required numbering at each
section break. I'll have a look, when I have a few minutes spare, to see if
the code can be modified to take account of existing page numbering
sequences.
An alternative would be to output each document to PDF format and then use
Acrobat (not the free reader) to combine the PDFs into a single larger PDF.

--
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Graham Mayor - Word MVP

My web site www.gmayor.com

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