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Setting Fraction Bar Overhang Spacing in the Equation Editor

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Duplicating Styles without Dependency

Summary: Create a new style in Word, and that style is typically based on an existing style. Display the Modify Style dialog box, and you can see an option (Style Based On drop-down list) that allows the current style to inherit the characteristics of a style on which it is based. How do you duplicate a style without the Style Based On being set to any other style? A discussion of the ins, outs, and trials associated with this seemingly innocent question. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, and Word 2003.)

When you create a new style in Word, that style is typically based on an existing style. If you display the Modify Style dialog box (Click here to see a related figure.) , you can see that there is an option (Style Based On drop-down list) that allows the current style to inherit the characteristics of a style on which it is based.

If you create a new style using Word's inherent "style by example" capability, the new style is automatically based on the old style in the text. You can see this if you format a paragraph with the Normal style, and then apply some explicit formatting to it. Then, with the insertion point still in that paragraph, enter a new style name in the Style box on the Formatting toolbar. Word creates the new style, giving it the name you specified. If you then display the Modify Style dialog box for this new style, you'll see that the Style Based On drop-down is set to Normal, the original style for the paragraph.

So how do you go about duplicating a style without the Style Based On being set to any other style? There seems to be no way to do this in Word. Some WordTips subscribers suggested using the Organizer to create the style, in this manner:

  1. Start with two documents--your original document and a new, blank document. You'll need to save the new document to disk so it can be accessed by the Organizer.
  2. In your original document, create the two styles--your original style and a new one that is based on that style.
  3. Use the Organizer to copy the two styles from the original document to the new, blank document.
  4. In the new, blank document, rename both styles.
  5. Use the Organizer to copy the second style back to the original document.

The rationale is that this copied style will no longer be based on any existing style, since the original style was not copied back with it, and there is no style in the original document that bears the new name of the original style. The only problem is that when the Organizer copies the style back to the original document, it doesn't set the Style Based On drop-down to (no style), it sets it instead to Normal. In other words, you are still in the same predicament, and you still need to display the Style Based On drop-down to manually change to (no style).

The bottom line is that, short of a macro, the easiest solution is to duplicate the style using the "style by example" capability and then set the Style Based On drop-down for the style to (no style). Displaying the Modify Style dialog box may be tiresome, but there seems to be no other way around it. If other macro-based solutions become available in the future, you'll read about them here, in WordTips.

Tip #95 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003

Find and Replace Almost Anything! An invaluable resource for learning how to harness the full power of Word's search and replace capabilities. You'll discover everything you need in order to master all the intricacies of finding and replacing elements of your document, including the super-powerful "wildcard searches" available in Word.
 
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