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The Discussion pane is where you do the majority of work while in the midst of a Word 2000, Word 2002, or Word 2003 online discussion. This is where you navigate through the comments of others and make your own responses. You can even edit your previous comments.
You already know that the Discussion pane appears at the bottom of your Word program window. It is similar in nature to the footnotes, endnotes, and comments windows with which you may already be familiar. You manage the Discussions pane by using the Previous and Next tools on the Discussions toolbar. Clicking on either of these allows you to step through the comments saved for a document.
As you are viewing comments, you will notice a small document icon at the end of each comment. (This icon is directly within the comment area of the Discussion pane, and not on a toolbar.) If you click on this icon you can see a menu of actions you can take on the particular comment you are viewing. Most of the time, the only meaningful menu choice is Reply, although if you are the author of the currently displayed comment you can also choose Edit and Delete. (You can also choose these if you have administrator privileges on the discussion server.)
When you click on Reply, Word displays the Enter Discussion Text dialog box, and you can enter a response. Word displays the response in the Discussion pane directly beneath the comment to which you replied.
You can close the Discussion pane by simply clicking on the Close button on the Discussion toolbar. (This also hides the Discussion toolbar.) When you later want to review discussion comments, you will need to again connect to the discussion server.
Tip #773 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 2000 2002 2003
Document and Annotate! One of the easily overlooked tools provided by Word is the ability to add footnotes and endnotes to your documents. WordTips: Footnotes and Endnotes is the definitive resource guide to using these tools to enhance your documents.