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#1
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Word Manuscript -> Book Format
I have an A4 word document, with about 10 styles, chapter & book titles in
headers and page numbers in footers. I have to convert this document to a 'book' format. This means a special page size, different font, substitution of styles, probably some changes to the chapters and the paragraph formatting has to change to justified + first line indent + exact line spacing/ paragraph spacing. I tried working with a copy of the existing A4 document and resizing the page and changing styles but that produced a lot of inconsistencies - and real problems if you made an changes from the "page layout" menu. So this does not seem a good idea. My current plan is to make a new template with the page size and styles set and add some dummy text to to produce a good working template - and then copy / paste the text, from the existing document, to book one chapter at a time. I was wondering, before I embark on this exercise, if there were any drawbacks with this idea or perhaps better ways of doing this? All suggestions appreciated. Thanks, Steven |
#2
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In article , NO SPAM PLEASE
wrote: I have an A4 word document, with about 10 styles, chapter & book titles in headers and page numbers in footers. I have to convert this document to a 'book' format. This means a special page size, different font, substitution of styles, probably some changes to the chapters and the paragraph formatting has to change to justified + first line indent + exact line spacing/ paragraph spacing. I tried working with a copy of the existing A4 document and resizing the page and changing styles but that produced a lot of inconsistencies - and real problems if you made an changes from the "page layout" menu. So this does not seem a good idea. My current plan is to make a new template with the page size and styles set and add some dummy text to to produce a good working template - and then copy / paste the text, from the existing document, to book one chapter at a time. I was wondering, before I embark on this exercise, if there were any drawbacks with this idea or perhaps better ways of doing this? All suggestions appreciated. If you must use Word, that is the right way to go about it. If you are serious about getting your book properly laid out, Word is the wrong program. It is a Word processor. It is not a page or book layout program. Word's line and page breaks are slippery creatures. Its typography is up there with the best ransom notes. It is amazingly easy to pour your doc into Adobe InDesign and fix it from there. The results will be stunning. There is a 30 day free trial if you can work fast. ;-) Work with your printer/typesetter on the detail of margins and registration marks and fonts and image resolution and colour spaces before you get too far into the job. -- I thought I would be the last on earth to mung my e-mail address. fsnospam$elliott$$ |
#3
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Elliott Roper wrote:
If you must use Word, that is the right way to go about it. If you are serious about getting your book properly laid out, Word is the wrong program. It is a Word processor. It is not a page or book layout program. Word's line and page breaks are slippery creatures. Its typography is up there with the best ransom notes. It is amazingly easy to pour your doc into Adobe InDesign and fix it from there. The results will be stunning. There is a 30 day free trial if you can work fast. ;-) Work with your printer/typesetter on the detail of margins and registration marks and fonts and image resolution and colour spaces before you get too far into the job. Thanks Elliott, I am a little concerned about moving over to InDesign as I do not know the product at all, and I suspect the learning curve is quite steep - though I appreciate your suggestion. I need to deliver the book in postscript (via Adobe Distiller) to a Xerox Docutech printer. I have used Word a few times this way - but not for anything as substantial as this. I will download the InDesign 30 day demo and have a look. Do you know any good tutorial sites for the product? Regards, Steven |
#4
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Yes, this is a good approach. If you have used styles in the original
manuscript, you can modify the same styles in your template to produce the results you want in the typeset book. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "NO SPAM PLEASE" wrote in message ... I have an A4 word document, with about 10 styles, chapter & book titles in headers and page numbers in footers. I have to convert this document to a 'book' format. This means a special page size, different font, substitution of styles, probably some changes to the chapters and the paragraph formatting has to change to justified + first line indent + exact line spacing/ paragraph spacing. I tried working with a copy of the existing A4 document and resizing the page and changing styles but that produced a lot of inconsistencies - and real problems if you made an changes from the "page layout" menu. So this does not seem a good idea. My current plan is to make a new template with the page size and styles set and add some dummy text to to produce a good working template - and then copy / paste the text, from the existing document, to book one chapter at a time. I was wondering, before I embark on this exercise, if there were any drawbacks with this idea or perhaps better ways of doing this? All suggestions appreciated. Thanks, Steven |
#5
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In article , NO SPAM PLEASE
wrote: Elliott Roper wrote: If you must use Word, that is the right way to go about it. If you are serious about getting your book properly laid out, Word is the wrong program. It is a Word processor. It is not a page or book layout program. Word's line and page breaks are slippery creatures. Its typography is up there with the best ransom notes. It is amazingly easy to pour your doc into Adobe InDesign and fix it from there. The results will be stunning. There is a 30 day free trial if you can work fast. ;-) Work with your printer/typesetter on the detail of margins and registration marks and fonts and image resolution and colour spaces before you get too far into the job. Thanks Elliott, I am a little concerned about moving over to InDesign as I do not know the product at all, and I suspect the learning curve is quite steep - though I appreciate your suggestion. I need to deliver the book in postscript (via Adobe Distiller) to a Xerox Docutech printer. I have used Word a few times this way - but not for anything as substantial as this. I will download the InDesign 30 day demo and have a look. Do you know any good tutorial sites for the product? The tryout has good doco. I did a 48 page booklet with lots of illustrations and advertisements and fancy setting with the tryout completely from scratch, but I did know a bit about typesetting. I still had 20 days of the 30 left to run when I got the near perfect proofs back from the printers. A novel would have been easier, as long as the copy was perfect in Word before starting, but a technical book with diagrams and equations would have taken a lot more than 30 days. If you are working via Distiller, Word would have a good chance of succeeding too. You can squash the layout bugs before sending it off to the printer. It is something like herding cats isn't it? It's a tough call. InDesign's typography is way better than Word's. That will be important if you are setting justified. Placing art perfectly is far easier in InDesign. But it costs a lot of money if it still ain't done when the trial expires. -- I thought I would be the last on earth to mung my e-mail address. fsnospam$elliott$$ |
#6
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Elliott Roper wrote:
If you are working via Distiller, Word would have a good chance of succeeding too. You can squash the layout bugs before sending it off to the printer. It is something like herding cats isn't it? It's a tough call. InDesign's typography is way better than Word's. That will be important if you are setting justified. Placing art perfectly is far easier in InDesign. But it costs a lot of money if it still ain't done when the trial expires. Your description of Word's layout bugs as 'herding cats' is accurate and delightful! The manuscript is text with only one diagram. It is ideal for Word, and indeed I need to keep it in Word to make pdf's for sample chapter downloads (which will need to be A4). However the printed 'book' format is not A4 and the issue I have is converting the near-finished A4 document into a book with much smaller pages, different fonts, justification and so on. Unfortunately Word does not handle this type of transition very smoothly. I will download the sample copy of InDesign and take a look at it! Steven |
#7
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Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote:
Yes, this is a good approach. If you have used styles in the original manuscript, you can modify the same styles in your template to produce the results you want in the typeset book. Thanks Suzanne, My problem is this. The manuscript is in A4 format, with appropriate fonts, justification etc. I need two versions of the document as it will be published in two formats. The first is the final manuscript (Word A4) - PDF for download from the web site. I can easily do this via Adobe Distiller. The second, as postscript for printing as a hardback book, with a much smaller page size, different fonts (hence styles) and formatting. The issue I am working on is getting the text from the first format to the second in most reasonable and efficient manner. What I have discovered, so far, is that it is very hard work making a copy of the manuscript and then doing via 'Page Setup' to re-size the pages, amend the styles etc. I need to get the text across into a new document (using a new template) without bringing over the styles - but keeping some formatting (like words in italics & bold). I might be making a mountain out of a molehill here but my preliminary efforts seem to indicate that there is no easy/consistent way to do this with Word 2000. Would appreciate any insights you might have! Kind regards, Steven |
#8
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Hi Steven
NO SPAM PLEASE wrote: My problem is this. The manuscript is in A4 format, with appropriate fonts, justification etc. I need two versions of the document as it will be published in two formats. It's always a tough question: You can actually work with one single document. If you work very carefully with styles, avoid direct formatting alltogether, then it's not so hard to change the layout of the document: You will need two sets of your styles (named alike, but with different font sizes and spacing, place them in separate templates) and then you copy all styles from the one or from the other to your document. Globally changing page format and margins shouldn't bother you if you can apply the correct styles with a few mouseclicks through the Organizer. Then, you only once need to make manual hyphenation (use the CTRL SHIFT -) The first is the final manuscript (Word A4) - PDF for download from the web site. I can easily do this via Adobe Distiller. The second, as postscript for printing as a hardback book, with a much smaller page size, different fonts (hence styles) and formatting. The issue I am working on is getting the text from the first format to the second in most reasonable and efficient manner. The other approach would be to use one source document for the content, which you can load into documents based on different templates. What I have discovered, so far, is that it is very hard work making a copy of the manuscript and then doing via 'Page Setup' to re-size the pages, amend the styles etc. I need to get the text across into a new document (using a new template) without bringing over the styles - but keeping some formatting (like words in italics & bold). Use character styles a lot: Then you can change italics to bold (often a good idea when changing a paper-oriented document (book) to screen-oriented (PDF). I might be making a mountain out of a molehill here but my preliminary efforts seem to indicate that there is no easy/consistent way to do this with Word 2000. Would appreciate any insights you might have! If you want to stick to Word, maybe the following article can give you some insights: Creating a Template (Part II, by John McGhie) http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Customizat...platePart2.htm Greetinx ..bob -- /"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign | MS \ / | MVP X Against HTML | for / \ in e-mail & news | Word |
#9
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You don't want to lose or change the styles; that is, you don't want to
change one style for another. What you want to do is modify the styles. For example, if your body text is 12 pt TNR in your manuscript but you want it to be 10 pt Book Antiqua in the book, if you have applied Body Text style, all you have to do in the book format is modify the Body Text style, and the changes will be automatic. I assure you this is the easiest approach; I have converted many manuscripts to CRC for books, and this is what I do: even if every style in the manuscript is bog-standard 12 pt TNR, provided you have applied the appropriate style to every paragraph, the conversion is quite smooth. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "NO SPAM PLEASE" wrote in message ... Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: Yes, this is a good approach. If you have used styles in the original manuscript, you can modify the same styles in your template to produce the results you want in the typeset book. Thanks Suzanne, My problem is this. The manuscript is in A4 format, with appropriate fonts, justification etc. I need two versions of the document as it will be published in two formats. The first is the final manuscript (Word A4) - PDF for download from the web site. I can easily do this via Adobe Distiller. The second, as postscript for printing as a hardback book, with a much smaller page size, different fonts (hence styles) and formatting. The issue I am working on is getting the text from the first format to the second in most reasonable and efficient manner. What I have discovered, so far, is that it is very hard work making a copy of the manuscript and then doing via 'Page Setup' to re-size the pages, amend the styles etc. I need to get the text across into a new document (using a new template) without bringing over the styles - but keeping some formatting (like words in italics & bold). I might be making a mountain out of a molehill here but my preliminary efforts seem to indicate that there is no easy/consistent way to do this with Word 2000. Would appreciate any insights you might have! Kind regards, Steven |
#10
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Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote:
You don't want to lose or change the styles; that is, you don't want to change one style for another. What you want to do is modify the styles. For example, if your body text is 12 pt TNR in your manuscript but you want it to be 10 pt Book Antiqua in the book, if you have applied Body Text style, all you have to do in the book format is modify the Body Text style, and the changes will be automatic. I assure you this is the easiest approach; I have converted many manuscripts to CRC for books, and this is what I do: even if every style in the manuscript is bog-standard 12 pt TNR, provided you have applied the appropriate style to every paragraph, the conversion is quite smooth. Thanks Suzanne...this is the tactic I am going to employ! What about the change of page size....is there a 'safe' way to achieve this - or am I being just too worried? Regards, Steven |
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