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Standardizing Note Reference Placement
Selecting Printing of Color Pictures
Hidden text is a great help to those who want to "hide" certain parts of a document, either from viewing or from printing. However, it is not very good for hiding information that you don't want others to see in a document you are distributing. They (the ones to whom you are distributing the document) can display or print hidden text just as easily as you can.
There is no built-in feature of Word that allows you to "lock" hidden text so it can't be viewed. The best solution, then, is to simply remove all your hidden text as a last step before distributing your document. You can do this by using the Search and Replace features of Word, as follows:
If you find yourself stripping out hidden text quite a bit, you can automate the process by recording a macro that performs the above steps, or you can use the following macro:
Sub StripAllHidden()
Dim rngsStories As Word.StoryRanges
Dim rngStory As Word.Range
On Error GoTo NoDocOpen
Set rngsStories = ActiveDocument.StoryRanges
On Error GoTo 0
'Need to loop through all 'stories' to
'remove hidden text from footnotes, headers,
'etc. as well as body text.
For Each rngStory In rngsStories
With rngStory.Find
.ClearFormatting
.Font.Hidden = True
Call .Execute(vbNullString, False, False, False, _
False, False, True, wdFindContinue, True, _
ReplaceWith:=vbNullString, _
Replace:=wdReplaceAll)
End With
Next
Exit Sub
NoDocOpen:
End Sub
The other advantage of using this macro is that it will also look for hidden text in places where the regular Search and Replace function won't: footnotes, endnotes, headers, footers, etc.
Tip #625 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 2000 2002 2003 2007
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