Where is Prompt for document properties in Word 2007?

In the microsoft.public.word.docmanagement newsgroup, someone asked:

In previous versions of Word, you could turn on an option to display the properties dialog box every time a new document was saved. Pretty easy.


In Word 2003’s Tools->Options->Save tab, you could tell Word to prompt for document properties

Who can tell me how to do this in Word 2007. Can’t find the option anywhere.

In the Developer tab (if it’s not showing, turn it on in Word Options->Popular), click Document Panel. At the bottom of the Document Information Panel dialog box, tick the Always show document information panel on document open and initial save option.

Making Word 2007 a Little More Familiar

Moving from Word 2003’s toolbars and menus to Word 2007’s ribbon can be a bit of a shock to many users of earlier versions of Word. Some of this shock can be eased, however, by making your most-used tools from Word 2003 as visible as possible in Word 2007.

Contrast the interfaces for Word 2003 and Word 2007. Here, I’ve told Word 2003 to show the Standard and Formatting toolbars on two rows:

Notice that right above the ruler, you see the style name, the font name, and the point size. For the most part, no matter what you’re doing in Word, this information is always there where you can see it.

Now, take a look at the default view for Word 2007:

Here, too, you see the style, font, and point size, at least initially. However, if a style other than the ones that fit in the current style gallery window is one other than the first 4 or 5 (sometime more, sometimes fewer), then the current style name isn’t available to the user. Moreover, if you move out of the Home tab, style, font, and point size are no longer knowable at a glance.

I’m guessing that the programmers at Microsoft aren’t writers. I can tell this because no veteran Word writer would put up with not knowing at all times the current style, font, and point size. These are vital pieces of information. Well, perhaps you don’t agree. If you don’t, then this post isn’t meant for you. It’s meant instead for users who want to know at all times what’s in their document.

A solution is at hand, however, in the form of the Quick Access Toolbar, or QAT as it’s more affectionately known. First, look at where the Quick Access Toolbar is. It’s up there in the stratosphere, thousands of miles above where you’re working. This means that to see it, you’re going to have to look way above where you’re accustomed to looking. It also means that you’re going to have to move the mouse quite a bit more than you did when accessing the Formatting toolbar in Word 2003 and earlier.

So, let’s move it. Right click the QAT and choose Show Quick Access Toolbar Below the Ribbon, as shown here.

Great. Now the QAT is closer to the battlefield, even if the selection of tools is somewhat lacking. Let’s address that problem right now.

First, let’s add a style tool to the QAT so you can see what you’re wearing, so to speak. Right click the QAT and choose Customize Quick Access Toolbar. Set Choose commands from: to Commands Not in the Ribbon. Click in the list of commands and tap the T key to accelerate to just below the last command that starts with “S”. Scroll up a few commands and look for one that says Style. When you hover the mouse pointer over it, you see this:

The word Classic is the clue that you’re in the right place. With Style selected, click Add to move the command into the right-hand panel. Click the up arrow (5) to the right of the right panel until Style is at the top:

Click OK. Let’s see what it looks like now:

Great! Now we can always tell what style is applied at the insertion point. Not so great, however, is that unless the Home tab is displayed, you can’t necessarily tell what font and point size are selected. Let’s fix that.

In the Home tab, right click the font tool’s dropdown arrow, and choose Add to Quick Access Toolbar. Next, right click the point size tool’s dropdown arrow and choose Add to Quick Access Toolbar.

This done, you’re almost there:

But, there’s a visual problem. If you came here from Word 2003, you’re used to the three tools–style, font, and point size–being side by side. Click the dropdown arrow at the right end of the Quick Access Toolbar and remove the checks next to Save, Undo, and Redo. You’ll have to do this in three motions, since the dropdown list doesn’t remain displayed.

Once that’s done, the three formatting tools you added will now be side by size. Now you can click the dropdown arrow on the Quick Access Toolbar and put those tools back. They’ll be added to the right of point size, rather than where they were.

If you like, you can set up the newly positioned Quick Access Toolbar as a combination of Formatting and Standard toolbar tools so that the tools you need most often are right in front of you:

From left to right, we now have: Style, Font, Point size, New, Open, Save, Bold, Italic, and so on. But, notice which ribbon tab is selected: Review.

Now, no matter which ribbon tab is displayed, you’ll always have those tools at the ready. But, most important, if the style, font, or point size in the current document ever look a little strange to you, you’ll be able to tell at a glance what’s what.

Bigger matrices using the Linear method for inserting equations

As shown here, Word 2007’s equation interface provides a maximum matrix size of 3×3:

So, what if you need a 3×4, 4×4, 4×3, or some other size matrix? Are you out of luck? Not at all.

Begin by inserting a 3×3 matrix as shown above. What you see in your document is shown here, minus the “Click here” balloon:

Click as shown to drop down the control menu for the equation object for the choices shown at the right. Click on Linear.

This now exposes the ugly syntax for creating a matrix using the linear syntax:

So, what does this mean? Well, first of all, you’re not seeing the entire picture. What’s missing is the full syntax. If you could see the full syntax, you’d see:

\matrix(&&@&&@&&)

& corresponds to columns, and @ corresponds to rows. For x & characters, you get x+1 columns. For y @’s, you get y+1 rows.

When modifying the syntax to add additional columns, it’s easy. Just add a & as shown here:

(&&&@&&@&&)

Now, right-click the equation and choose Professional, and you’re rewarded with:

Right-click again and choose Linear, however, and you’ll see that Word automatically completed the syntax for you:

(&&&@&&&@&&&)

That’s because ragged matrices aren’t allowed. What’s a ragged matrice? Had they been permitted, the modified matrix using (&&&@&&@&&) would’ve looked something like this:

       
       
       

 

So, if you wanted a 4×4 matrix, what would you do? Insert a 3×3 and modify like so:

(&&&@&&@&&@&&)

Notice that I’ve added another column, and I’ve said to include 4 rows in that column. But, I haven’t added additional &’s in the other parts of the syntax specification. Nonetheless, when I right-click the equation and choose Professional, I now get this:

If I now flip this back to linear, I see that Word graciously filled out the needed syntax for me:

(&&&@&&&@&&&@&&&)

When going the other way – shrinking an existing matrix – you would need to completely modify the syntax. Word isn’t smart enough to sense that you’ve removed an & and now want a bunch more removed. But, frankly, if you want a smaller matrix, just use the built-in user interface.

Creating New Word 12 Files from Windows Explorer

A few days ago, in one of the public newsgroups, someone posted about a problem when creating new Word files in Windows Explorer. First, set your default font in Word to something other than Calibri 11 point. To do this, press Ctrl+D, select a different font and/or point size, then click Default. Click Yes to changing the default. If prompted later, say Yes to saving the changes in Normal.dotm.

Next, try the following:

  1. In Windows Explorer, right click in the files area and choose New->Microsoft Office Word Document.
  2. Type a name for the file, the double-click to open it.
  3. Regardless of your own default font and point size, Word will have created a file that uses Calibri 11 point as the default font.

Now, try it again, only this time choose New->Microsoft Office Word 97-2003 Document. This time, Word will correctly use your defaults, rather than its own hard-coded Calibri 11.

CAUTION: Editing the registry can damage windows and prevent your computer, office, and word from starting. It can also put out an eye. Edit your registry at your own risk.

The behavior for Word 97-2003 documents is controlled by the registry’s settings for what it does when you create a new .doc file in the “shell” (Windows Explorer). This is controlled by the following registry location:

HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.doc\Word.Document.8\ShellNew

In particular, it’s controlled by the FileName variable, which tells the system to look for WINWORD8.DOC, contained in the \windows\ShellNew folder.

If you look down a little later, however at:

HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.docx\Word.Document.12\ShellNew

there is no FileName variable. So, when you create a new .docx file this way, Word sees that there is no reference template or file, and it uses its own internal default Calibri 11 rather than the user’s default font settings.

A partial fix for this behavior is to create a new FileName variable in the docx registry location, pointing to a file that contains the desired default fonts, such as a file you might name WINWORD12.DOCX (you would need to create that file, too, not just a pointer to it). Then, when you create a new file using the NewðMicrosoft Office Word Document method from Windows Explorer, it will use the defaults contained in that file (WINWORD12.DOCX, for example).

This does not solve the whole problem, however. That’s because when you change the default font in Word 12, it stores the new default in Normal.dotm and in WINWORD8.DOC. The change doesn’t get communicated to your WINWORD12.DOCX.

The obvious solution is to point the .docx\Word.Document.12\ShellNew FileName variable at WINWORD8.DOC, right? Well, that is what logic dictates. However, when you do that and create a new file, the resulting file cannot be opened by Word. So, FileName has to point to a different file.

You might be tempted to point FileName at Normal.dotm in its default location. This, too, doesn’t work. It tells you that the folder is in use, creates two new files (instead of one), and both use Calibri 11 regardless of your default settings. So, unless someone else discovers a different work-around, we’re left with half a solution.

Of course, if you create new files from within Word 12/2007 itself, then you don’t need this solution. You need this solution only if you’re addicted to the Windows Explorer method. In a later article, I’ll look at other solutions.

Redaction in Word 2007

If you look in Word 2007’s Help under redaction, there is an entry for the Microsoft Office Word 2007 Redaction Add-in. Sounds good, right.

Well, as of March 13, 2007, it doesn’t exist.

If you click the link to download it, you’ll get:

The download you requested is unavailable. If you continue to see this message when trying to access this download, go to the “Search for a Download” area on the Download Center home page.

If you search, you’ll discover an add-in for Word 2003, but none for Word 2007. And, if you download it and try to install it in Vista, you’ll get an error saying that you need to install .NET Framework 1.something. Well, by default, Vista includes .NET Framework 3.0, and apparently, that’s not good enough for the Word 2003 redaction tool. If you thought that having version 3 would include the ability to run items requiring version 1, you’d be wrong at least in this case.

Meanwhile, over on my laptop, which is running Windows XP and does indeed have the requisite version of .NET Framework, it installs just fine. This should let me see if it works in Word 2007, since my laptop has both Word 2003 and 2007, right?

Amusingly, at the Installation Complete screen, the Redaction Add-in setup program includes the ironic notation:

This add-in is built on the Microsoft .NET Framework. Please use Windows Update to check for any critical updates to the .NET Framework.

Yeah, right. But, not .NET Framework version 3.0, I guess.

All installed… um. Well. I see it the files in an offshoot of the Program Files folder. But, not only is it not showing up in Word 2007, it’s not showing up in Word 2003, either. Not there after rebooting, either.

Well. I don’t have the patience or time to play with it now. But, it’s not looking good for redaction in Word 2007, even if you happen to have the correct version of .NET Framework installed. It looks as if Microsoft expected to have it ready in time for Office 2007 RTM, but didn’t make it.

Word 2007 and Word 2003 Coexisting

If you’ve ever used two recent versions of Word on the same computer, you know doubt have encountered that infuriating dialog that tells you to wait while Word is configured. You use Word 2003 for a little while, and then you switch back to Word 2007, and you get the “Wait, while…” yet again–multiple times in the same session.

Until now, I thought that the only way for two versions of Word to peacefully coexist was if one of them always loaded using the /a switch. Among other things, this meant that the /a version would not be able to use any of your custom settings (except for Word 2007’s Quick Access Toolbar settings, which seem robust with respect to /a).

It can now be revealed, however, that there’s an easy registry solution that allow multiple versions of Word to exist, and for you to have your various customizations remain in play as well.

Caution: Edit your registry settings at your own risk. Incorrectly editing your registry can damage Word, Office, Windows, your community, the planet, and the universe. For additional information on how to edit your registry, consult Google. I’m assuming here that you know what you’re doing, and hence will give you only the bullet. It’s up to you to buy your own gun.

Note: Do not do this if you’re running just one version of Word! Otherwise, occasional and useful self-repairs won’t happen.

Now, for the juicy bits. You’ll need to add a NoRereg DWORD (32-bit) value to the Options section for each version of Word that you want to run. In Office 12, this value goes here:

HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\12.0\Word\Options

After you create the NoRereg value, set it equal to 1. And you’re done!

Repeat this for each additional version of Word you plan to run. For Word 2003, for example, the place to add the NoRereg value would be in:

HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\11.0\Word\Options

Peek-a-boo clipart

Someone asked:

I’d like to set up my clip art so it is peeking out from a page border. It should appear as though the area between the edge of the paper and the page border is blocking a part of the clip art. Can this be done?

I don’t think you can do it with the page border itself, since the border is just a line with no fill. However, if you insert–into the header/footer area (so it can be repeated on multiple pages)–a rectangular filled shape (using white fill, assuming that’s your background color), it will give the same appearance as a border. You can then layer your clip art object behind the shape. Both the clip art and the rectangular shape should be inserted into the header/footer area, and both have their wrapping set to Behind Text. You can use the order settings to send the clip art behind the shape.

Below, I’ve used an off-white colored shape so you can see the effect more clearly.

Send to Mail Recipient (Not as Attachment)

I keep seeing this question come up in the public newsgroups. In Word 2003—assuming you had Outlook 2003—you could choose FileSend toMail recipient. In Word 2007, that option does not exist in the default interface structure. However, you can add it to the Quick Access Toolbar (Quick Access Toolbar) to regain the same functionality (assuming you have Outlook 2007).

Right-click the QAT and choose Customize Quick Access Toolbar. Set Choose commands from: to Commands Not in the Ribbon. Scroll to the commands starting with S, click on Send to Mail Recipient, then click AddOK. Thereafter, you can use the tool on the QAT to toggle email headers on/off for initiating email from Word 2007.

Next Entries »