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  3. Trimming a Word Document?

Trimming a Word Document?

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  • M Offline
    M Offline
    Matt Philmon
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Let's say I have a ... let's call her DU (Dumb User). Now, if DU was just your average person you have to support from time to time you'd tell the person to learn the tools and leave you alone (maybe you'd do it nicer than that) but this DU is a high ranking manager. DU does things a certain way. She's older and not very tech savy but isn't going to spend time learning how to do things properly and to suggest she do so... is a bad idea. Now, DU has a document she's been working on for a long time. This document is 28 pages long, using Microsoft Word 2003. It's also almost 26MB in size. DU does not understand the concept behind different image formats, how Word embeds and scales these images, etc. DU wants an image, drag/drop, copy/paste, or insert image... if she wants a snippet from a Microsoft Excel sheet, she just copies all the cells right into the document. DU doesn't actually NEED the cells in her document, just the data, but DU doesn't understand the difference. So... we now have a massive, mission critical document, that every time she wants to email this document (which is often) is a 25MB attachment, because DU doesn't understand compression, and truthfully, the person on the receiving end of this document... we'll call him DU2 is also blissfully unaware of most things computer related, including what a zip file is. Does anyone know of some tools that might be available to automatically scan a Word document and ... convert the embedded pieces into manageable sizes to "trim" the document for them? That way I could just "fix" it without spending the next few hours manually correcting every image or insert in that.

    B A H 3 Replies Last reply
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    • M Matt Philmon

      Let's say I have a ... let's call her DU (Dumb User). Now, if DU was just your average person you have to support from time to time you'd tell the person to learn the tools and leave you alone (maybe you'd do it nicer than that) but this DU is a high ranking manager. DU does things a certain way. She's older and not very tech savy but isn't going to spend time learning how to do things properly and to suggest she do so... is a bad idea. Now, DU has a document she's been working on for a long time. This document is 28 pages long, using Microsoft Word 2003. It's also almost 26MB in size. DU does not understand the concept behind different image formats, how Word embeds and scales these images, etc. DU wants an image, drag/drop, copy/paste, or insert image... if she wants a snippet from a Microsoft Excel sheet, she just copies all the cells right into the document. DU doesn't actually NEED the cells in her document, just the data, but DU doesn't understand the difference. So... we now have a massive, mission critical document, that every time she wants to email this document (which is often) is a 25MB attachment, because DU doesn't understand compression, and truthfully, the person on the receiving end of this document... we'll call him DU2 is also blissfully unaware of most things computer related, including what a zip file is. Does anyone know of some tools that might be available to automatically scan a Word document and ... convert the embedded pieces into manageable sizes to "trim" the document for them? That way I could just "fix" it without spending the next few hours manually correcting every image or insert in that.

      B Offline
      B Offline
      Bassam Abdul Baki
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      No, but you may want to use an auto-attachment compressor[^]. It's also environmental friendly.


      "Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel." - Samuel Johnson Web - Blog - RSS - Math - LinkedIn - BM

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      • M Matt Philmon

        Let's say I have a ... let's call her DU (Dumb User). Now, if DU was just your average person you have to support from time to time you'd tell the person to learn the tools and leave you alone (maybe you'd do it nicer than that) but this DU is a high ranking manager. DU does things a certain way. She's older and not very tech savy but isn't going to spend time learning how to do things properly and to suggest she do so... is a bad idea. Now, DU has a document she's been working on for a long time. This document is 28 pages long, using Microsoft Word 2003. It's also almost 26MB in size. DU does not understand the concept behind different image formats, how Word embeds and scales these images, etc. DU wants an image, drag/drop, copy/paste, or insert image... if she wants a snippet from a Microsoft Excel sheet, she just copies all the cells right into the document. DU doesn't actually NEED the cells in her document, just the data, but DU doesn't understand the difference. So... we now have a massive, mission critical document, that every time she wants to email this document (which is often) is a 25MB attachment, because DU doesn't understand compression, and truthfully, the person on the receiving end of this document... we'll call him DU2 is also blissfully unaware of most things computer related, including what a zip file is. Does anyone know of some tools that might be available to automatically scan a Word document and ... convert the embedded pieces into manageable sizes to "trim" the document for them? That way I could just "fix" it without spending the next few hours manually correcting every image or insert in that.

        A Offline
        A Offline
        Abu Mami
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        The best way to trim a (MS) Word document is to use Open Office.

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        • A Abu Mami

          The best way to trim a (MS) Word document is to use Open Office.

          J Offline
          J Offline
          Jim Crafton
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          Yes, but then I think either DU or DU2 would complain about the fact their document was now 0 MB :)

          ¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! Real Mentats use only 100% pure, unfooled around with Sapho Juice(tm)! SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0 0 rows returned Save an Orange - Use the VCF! Techno Silliness

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          • M Matt Philmon

            Let's say I have a ... let's call her DU (Dumb User). Now, if DU was just your average person you have to support from time to time you'd tell the person to learn the tools and leave you alone (maybe you'd do it nicer than that) but this DU is a high ranking manager. DU does things a certain way. She's older and not very tech savy but isn't going to spend time learning how to do things properly and to suggest she do so... is a bad idea. Now, DU has a document she's been working on for a long time. This document is 28 pages long, using Microsoft Word 2003. It's also almost 26MB in size. DU does not understand the concept behind different image formats, how Word embeds and scales these images, etc. DU wants an image, drag/drop, copy/paste, or insert image... if she wants a snippet from a Microsoft Excel sheet, she just copies all the cells right into the document. DU doesn't actually NEED the cells in her document, just the data, but DU doesn't understand the difference. So... we now have a massive, mission critical document, that every time she wants to email this document (which is often) is a 25MB attachment, because DU doesn't understand compression, and truthfully, the person on the receiving end of this document... we'll call him DU2 is also blissfully unaware of most things computer related, including what a zip file is. Does anyone know of some tools that might be available to automatically scan a Word document and ... convert the embedded pieces into manageable sizes to "trim" the document for them? That way I could just "fix" it without spending the next few hours manually correcting every image or insert in that.

            H Offline
            H Offline
            hairy_hats
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            I think you actually need a DU trimmer.

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