How to merge documents

K

keskarsanjit

I have written a book with each chapter being a seperate file. Now i
wish to merge the five chapters into one MS Word file.

I obviousl do not want to lose any formatting or fonts.

Some of my pages in certain files are landscaped while others are
potrait.

In other words the five files are consideraby different in layout,
content and even margins (maybe even page lenght)

What's the best way or the way thta will minimize losses?

Is there a way fro within MS word itself (or third party program) and
where can i get DETAILED information on how to do this successfully??

Thanks for any help here
 
S

Suzanne S. Barnhill

You'll need section breaks, at a minimum; see
http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/WorkWithSections.htm. This will
preserve layout (page orientation, margins, headers/footers, etc.), but if
you have used the same styles with different formatting in the various
documents, all the paragraphs in a given style will take on the formatting
of the target document. A workaround for this is to slightly rename the
styles in the source documents.
 
P

Peter A

(e-mail address removed)>, (e-mail address removed)
says...
I have written a book with each chapter being a seperate file. Now i
wish to merge the five chapters into one MS Word file.

I obviousl do not want to lose any formatting or fonts.

Some of my pages in certain files are landscaped while others are
potrait.

In other words the five files are consideraby different in layout,
content and even margins (maybe even page lenght)

What's the best way or the way thta will minimize losses?

Is there a way fro within MS word itself (or third party program) and
where can i get DETAILED information on how to do this successfully??

Thanks for any help here

It's really quite easy:

1) Open the first document
2) Go to the end of the document and insert a next page section break.
3) With the cursor after the section break, use the Insert, File command
to insert the next document.
4) Return to step 2 and repeat for all documents.

The only possible source of problems is if two or more documents have
styles with the same name and different formatting. In this case the
formatting of the first document will be used.
 
S

Suzanne S. Barnhill

Actually, inserting a section break in the target document will help not at
all, since the formatting of Section 1 will still be stored in the paragraph
mark at the end of Section 2. For this to work, a section break must be
added at the end of the source document before it is inserted into the
target.
 
P

perfection

Nope thisdoes not work. Even after section breaking for new page the
inserted document does nt retain its page margins. It defaults to
that of the earlier file
 
P

perfection

Sorry folks i was doing it wrong -- thanks

If i have embedded my fonts in an inserted file (say file B) does the
file i insert into (say file 'A') automatically embed the fonts of
File B or do i have to change the options of file A to do so

Just one more thing - If i have a table formatextendign right to the
bottom of my last page of a document how would i insert a page section
break wihtout wasting a page (i.e. unnecessarily inserting a blank
page)
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top