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Working with E-mailed Documents

Summary: Ding! You've got mail. That mail has a Word document attached to it. Before you rush off and open that document, take a moment to reflect on the information presented in this tip. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, and Word 2003.)

It is not uncommon, in this electronic age, for Word documents to be sent around the globe as e-mail attachments. The ease with which this is done is astounding to those of us who remember the "old days" of personal computing. If you receive a Word document as an e-mail attachment, there are a couple of things that you should keep in mind.

First, if the document is from an untrusted source, make sure you have some sort of virus protection in place. Macro viruses can be transmitted in Word documents very easily, and there are a pain to get rid of. (Some versions of Word are more resistant to macro viruses than others, so they are not as much of a plague as they used to be.) In addition, some attachments you may think are documents may not really be documents--they could be virus or worm programs that execute directly if you double-click the attachment.

Second, if you plan on making changes to the received document, make sure you save the document as a regular file before you make changes to it. In other words, don't double-click on the attachment and then make changes. Here's why: When you double-click on the attachment, most e-mail programs save the file in a temporary directory and then use Word to open it. When you close the document, any changes you made are saved to the file in the temporary directory, they are not saved to the attachment itself. It is even possible that the e-mail program simply throws away the temporary file in the temporary directory. In this case, all your changes are completely lost.

The best bet is to explicitly save the attachment as a file. Then, outside of the e-mail program, you can use Word to load the file and make changes. In this case the received file acts as you would expect it to. If you then want to send the changed file to a different person, all you need to do is attach it to a different e-mail message and send it on its way.

Tip #160 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003

Create and Merge! Using Word's mail merge tool you can quickly and easily combine data from a variety of data sources to create great individualized documents that incorporate your data in ways that you control. WordTips: Mail Merge Magic is an invaluable source for learning how to harness the full power of Word's mail merging capabilities.
 
Check out WordTips: Mail Merge Magic today!