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Files and links A hyperlink goes to the wrong destination.
This can be caused by one of following:
- The destination may have been entered incorrectly Make sure that the hyperlink (hyperlink: Colored and underlined text or a graphic that you click to go to a file, a location in a file, a Web page on the World Wide Web, or a Web page on an intranet. Hyperlinks can also go to newsgroups and to Gopher, Telnet, and FTP sites.) destination is correct.
- The original destination may have moved to a different location Use your Web browser (Web browser: Software that interprets HTML files, formats them into Web pages, and displays them. A Web browser, such as Microsoft Internet Explorer, can follow hyperlinks, transfer files, and play sound or video files that are embedded in Web pages.) to navigate to the destination to ensure that it still exists.
A hyperlink does not work.
This can be caused by one of the following:
- The destination may have moved or may not exist any more Verify the file exists by viewing the destination file with your Web browser if it is on the Internet, or with Microsoft Windows Explorer if it is on your hard drive or a network.
- The text you believe is a hyperlink only looks like a hyperlink Select the text, and then click Insert Hyperlink
to make sure the text is a hyperlink.
- You may not have access to the destination If the destination file is on the Internet, make sure you have a connection to the Internet. If the destination is on a network, contact your network administrator to ensure you have access to the destination file.
I don't see hyperlink commands on the shortcut menu.
The Hyperlink
shortcut menu will not appear if the hyperlink display text contains a grammatical or spelling error and Microsoft Word is automatically checking for proofing errors. Text with spelling errors contains a red wavy underline; text with grammatical errors contains a green wavy underline.
After you accept or reject the proofing error, Word can display the Hyperlink shortcut menu. To do this, right-click the text that contains the underline, and then accept the suggested correction or click Ignore.
I want to keep my supporting Web files in the same folder as my Web page.
When you save a Web page to a Web server, all supporting files — such as bullets, background textures, and graphics — are by default stored in a separate folder. If you want to save supporting files in the same folder as your Web page, do the following:
- On the Tools menu, click Options, and then click the General tab.
- Click Web Options, and then click the Files tab.
- Under File names and locations, clear the Organize supporting files in a folder check box.
Note Make sure when you move Web pages that you also move all supporting files and folders to the same location.
The name of a supporting folder for a Web page is in another language.
By default, when you save your file as a Web page, all supporting files — such as bullets, background textures, and graphics — are organized in a supporting folder. The name of the supporting folder is the name of the Web page plus an underscore (_), a period (.), or a hyphen (-), and the word "files." For some language versions of Office, the word "files" is translated. For example, suppose you use the Dutch language version of Office to save a file named Page1 as a Web page. The default name of the supporting folder would be Page1_bestanden.
Note If you save your Web page with a short file name (maximum of eight characters, plus a three-character file extension) by clearing the Use long file names whenever possible check box in the Web Options dialog box, the supporting folder is the name of the Web page without the word "files." The default name for the Web page supporting folder in each language version of Office
| Language | Default name for Web page supporting folder |
|---|
|
| Arabic | .files | | Basque | _fitxategiak | | Bulgarian | .files | | Catalan | _fitxers | | Chinese (Simplified) | .files | | Chinese (Traditional) | .files | | Croatian | _datoteke | | Czech | _soubory | | Danish | -filer | | Dutch | _bestanden | | English | _files | | Estonian | _failid | | Finnish | _tiedostot | | French | _fichiers | | German | -Dateien | | Greek | .files | | Hebrew | .files | | Hungarian | _elemei | | Italian | -file | | Japanese | .files | | Korean | .files | | Latvian | _fails | | Lithuanian | _bylos | | Norwegian | -filer | | Polish | _pliki | | Portuguese | _ficheiros | | Portuguese (Brazil) | _arquivos | | Romanian | .files | | Russian | .files | | Serbian (Cyrillic) | .files | | Serbian (Latin) | _fajlovi | | Slovakian | .files | | Slovenian | _datoteke | | Spanish | _archivos | | Swedish | -filer | | Thai | .files | | Turkish | _dosyalar | | Ukranian | .files | | Vietnamese | .files |
Authoring Whenever I edit a Web page, I have to confirm that Word is my default editor.
When you edit a Web document when using a browser such as Microsoft Internet Explorer, Microsoft Office checks whether Microsoft Word is registered as the default editor. If another program is registered as the default editor, Office displays a message asking whether you want to restore Word as your default editor. If you don't want Office to check your default editor, do the following:
- On the Tools menu, click Options, and then click the General tab.
- Click Web Options, and then click the Files tab.
- Under Default editor, clear the Check if Office is the default editor for Web pages created in Office check box.
- Clear the Check if Word is the default editor for all other Web pages check box.
Some commands are not available.
Microsoft Word makes some commands unavailable when you open a Web page, create a new document based on a Web page template, choose to disable features not supported by Word 97, or save your document as a Word 6.0/95 document. The unavailable commands are not supported by the application you are creating the document for. For example, underline color is not available when you create Web pages, documents for Word 97, or documents for Word 6.0/95.
The HTML file that I want to edit opens in the wrong Microsoft Office application.
When you open an HTML (HTML: The standard markup language used for documents on the World Wide Web. HTML uses tags to indicate how Web browsers should display page elements such as text and graphics and how to respond to user actions.) or Single File Web Page (Single File Web Page (MHTML): An HTML document saved in MHTML format, which integrates inline graphics, applets, linked documents, and other supporting items referenced in the document.) file from the Open dialog box on the File menu, the file opens in the program the file was created in. For example, if you attempt to open an HTML format file in Microsoft PowerPoint that was created in Word, the file opens in Word instead. To open an HTML file in PowerPoint that was created in another Microsoft Office program, right-click the file in the Open dialog box, click Open With, and then click Microsoft PowerPoint on the shortcut menu.
Note For best results when you edit an HTML or MHTML file, open it in the program the file was created in.
I saved my Web page to a file server, and now some people can't find or view it.
If you use a long file name to save your Web page to a file server, site visitors running Microsoft Windows 3.1 won't be able to find or open your Web page, because Windows 3.1 recognizes and supports only short file names (maximum of eight characters, plus a three-character file extension). To always save files with short file names, do the following:
- On the Tools menu, click Options.
- Click the General tab, and then click Web Options.
- Click the Files tab.
- Under File names and locations, clear the Use long file names whenever possible check box.
Viewing I see <HTML> or another tag instead of my Web page content.
If you see angle brackets and tags, such as <HTML>, <HEAD>, and <P>, instead of the content of your Web page, one of the following might be true:
- You might be viewing HTML (HTML: The standard markup language used for documents on the World Wide Web. HTML uses tags to indicate how Web browsers should display page elements such as text and graphics and how to respond to user actions.) tags in the Microsoft Script Editor. You might have entered this view by clicking HTML Source on the View menu. To return to viewing your content in Microsoft Word, in the Microsoft Script Editor, click Exit on the File menu.
- You might have opened a file that uses a Web page format but doesn't have one of the following file name extensions: .html, .htm, .htx, .asp, .otm, .mht, or .mhtml. Or you might be viewing the HTML source for this file instead of the browser's display of the content. To view Web page content, click Options on the Tools menu, and then click the General tab. Select the Confirm conversion at Open check box. Close the file, and then reopen it in Word. In the Convert File dialog box, select HTML Document.
ConnectingGraphics I see a red X or blank image on my Web page where the graphic should be.
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If you move or copy your Web page without moving the supporting files, or if you rename your graphics, any links to supporting files — such as bullets, background textures, and graphics — may be broken. To automatically update links when you save your Web page in Microsoft Word, on the Tools menu, click Options, and then click the General tab. Click Web Options, and then click the Files tab. Under File names and locations, select the Update links on save check box.
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Check your browser settings, or consider testing in a different browser. Custom options can be set in browsers, such as the default text and background colors and whether or not graphics are displayed.
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If you link a graphic to a Web page, and the graphic format isn't supported by your browser, your graphics won't be visible. Make sure that the linked picture is in a graphic format that is compatible with your browser. The .jpg and .gif graphic formats are compatible with most browsers.
I saved my Web page, and now there are extra picture files in my supporting files folder.
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If you inserted a picture When you create a Web page with inserted pictures, Word creates copies of your picture files to use for editing. If your picture is in GIF (GIF: A graphics file format (.gif extension in Windows) used to display indexed-color graphics on the World Wide Web. It supports up to 256 colors and uses lossless compression, meaning that no image data is lost when the file is compressed.), JPEG (JPEG: A graphics file format (.jpg extension in Microsoft Windows) supported by many Web browsers that was developed for compressing and storing photographic images. It's best used for graphics with many colors, such as scanned photos.) or PNG (PNG: A graphic file format that is supported by some Web browsers. Short for Portable Network Graphics, PNG supports variable transparency of images and control of image brightness on different computers. PNG files are compressed bitmaps..) format, you can avoid extra picture files by linking (link: Used to insert a copy of information created in one program into a Microsoft Word document while maintaining a connection between the two files. When the information changes in the source file, the changes are reflected in the destination document.) to the picture instead of inserting it.
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If you edited a linked picture in Microsoft Word When you edit a linked picture within Word, the picture file is copied to your supporting files folder. To avoid this, always edit linked pictures in a graphics program.
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If you want to change an inserted picture to a linked picture To create a linked picture, first delete the inserted picture from the document. On the Insert menu, point to Picture, and then click From File. Locate and open the folder that contains the picture you want. Click the picture you want to insert. Click the arrow to the right of the Insert button. Click Link to File.
All of my graphics and objects change to GIF or JPEG format when I save as a Web page.
When you save your document as a Web page, all graphics and objects — including pictures, AutoShapes, WordArt, text boxes, callouts, Equation Editor objects, Organization Chart objects, and Graph objects — are saved in GIF (GIF: A graphics file format (.gif extension in Windows) used to display indexed-color graphics on the World Wide Web. It supports up to 256 colors and uses lossless compression, meaning that no image data is lost when the file is compressed.), JPEG (JPEG: A graphics file format (.jpg extension in Microsoft Windows) supported by many Web browsers that was developed for compressing and storing photographic images. It's best used for graphics with many colors, such as scanned photos.), or PNG (PNG: A graphic file format that is supported by some Web browsers. Short for Portable Network Graphics, PNG supports variable transparency of images and control of image brightness on different computers. PNG files are compressed bitmaps..) format so that they can be viewed in a Web browser.
When you re-open the Web page in Microsoft Word, the graphics and objects you see are in their original formats so that you can edit them as you normally do.
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