Warning: You are viewing this page with an unsupported Web browser. This Web site works best with Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 or later, Firefox 1.5, or Netscape Navigator 8.0 or later. Learn more about supported browsers.
Opening or creating the main document I want to use main documents I created in other versions of Word.
You can use main documents (main document: In a mail-merge operation in Word, the document that contains the text and graphics that are the same for each version of the merged document, for example, the return address or salutation in a form letter.) that you created in the following versions of Microsoft Word:
- Microsoft Word 2002, 2000, 97, 7.x, 6.x, or 2.x for Windows, if the main document is attached to a data source (data source: A file that contains the information to be merged into a document. For example, the list of names and addresses you want to use in a mail merge. You must connect to the data source before you can use the information in it.).
- Microsoft Word 98 for the Macintosh, if the main document is attached to a data source.
- Microsoft Word version 1.x for Windows, if the main document contains a DATA field that identifies the data source.
- Word for the Macintosh or Word for MS-DOS, if the main document contains a DATA instruction that identifies the data source (data document).
I can't create a catalog.
What was called a catalog in some previous versions of Microsoft Word is now called a directory. You can create one by selecting Directory in step 1 of the Mail Merge task pane and then following the steps in the task pane.
Merging the data into the main document I selected the option to edit individual letters, and I don't know how to print specific letters.
When you merge form letters or similar types of merged documents to a new document, Microsoft Word places each letter in a separate section (section: A portion of a document in which you set certain page formatting options. You create a new section when you want to change such properties as line numbering, number of columns, or headers and footers.) of the new document.
To print only specific letters from the new document, click Print on the File menu. In the Pages box, type the numbers of the sections that contain the letters you want to print. For example, to print the third, sixth, seventh, and eighth form letters, type s3,s6-s8 in the Pages box. To identify the section number, click a letter and then note the section number displayed in the status bar — for example, "Sec 3."
When I try to merge to e-mail, I get a message asking if I want to allow access to my Outlook addresses.
When you merge to e-mail with Microsoft Outlook as your e-mail program, you may get Outlook messages informing you that a program is trying to access e-mail addresses and send e-mail. These are security measures designed to protect against viruses that replicate through e-mail.
To continue with the merge, select the Allow access for check box, and then select the amount of time you need to complete the merge. Click Yes, and then if prompted again, continue clicking Yes until the merge is complete.
These prompts do not appear if the e-mail messages are sent in HTML format. To prevent the prompts from appearing when performing a merge to e-mail, select HTML as the mail format in the Merge to E-mail dialog box.
Appearance of unexpected information in the merged document I see address information for someone I don't know.
The Insert Address Block and Greeting Line dialog boxes provide sample information for preview purposes. The sample recipient you see in these dialog boxes will not appear anywhere in your merged document.
Parts of my mail merge document have different formatting.
If the information in your data source is formatted differently from the text in your main document, the formatting may not look correct when the information is merged.
In the main document, select the entire merge field that corresponds to the data you want to format. Then on the Format menu, click Font, and select the options you want.
The formatting of addresses in inconsistent.
If your data source includes addresses from different countries or regions, Word can format the addresses according to the country or region of the recipient's address. If you want all the addresses to use a single format, you can turn this option off in the Insert Address Block dialog box by clearing the Format address according to the destination country/region check box.
Some of my recipient information is missing.
-
The information could be missing from the data source. In step 3 of the Mail Merge task pane (Select recipients), click Edit recipient list. In the Mail Merge Recipients list, locate the record containing the missing information. If the information is missing there, then it's missing from your data source. You can edit the data source directly and restart the merge, or you can exclude that recipient from this merge.
-
The Mail Merge task pane may not have recognized a column heading in your data source, which could result in an inability to map the information to a merge field. You can correct this by using the Match Fields dialog box. To do so, clickMatch Fields in the Insert Address Block, Greeting Line, or Insert Merge Field dialog boxes. In the Match Fields dialog box, click the arrow next to (not available), and then select the field from your data source that corresponds to the field required for the mail merge.
-
If information is missing from the address block or greeting line, make sure you've included all the information you want in the Address Block or Greeting Line dialog box, for example, recipient's name, salutation, and so on. To edit the address block or greeting line, right-click the AddressBlock or GreetingLine field in the document, and then click Edit Address Block or Edit Greeting Line.
|