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I'm using Word X on the Mac, with all the latest patches applied and
Asian language support installed. I'm editing in English, but many
files come to me from Japan or China.
Most of the time, the files I receive from my Japanese and Chinese
clients pose few problems. But every so often, I get a file with a
mismatch between the onscreen display of the type and where Word
believes that the cursor actually exists. So, for example, I'll use
Command-RightArrow to move to the start of the next word in a line, but
the cursor will appear midway through the word. As a result, I have no
idea where the insertion point is, and can only discover this through
experimentation--type a key and see what happens. As you can imagine,
this makes editing a nightmare.
One solution that occasionally works is to open a new blank document
and insert the file. What this does is display the contents of the
document using the settings specified by my own Normal template.
Because I haven't actually changed any of the style names or font
specifications, this seems to cause no grief for the author; however,
it saves my bacon by telling Word to display the onscreen text using
the font substitution settings that I have defined rather than the
settings defined by the author's template.
But every so often, as is the case today for a particularly thorny
Chinese manuscript*, nothing seems to work: I've tried the "insert
file" trick with no luck. I've tried modifying the "compatibility"
settings (in the Preferences dialog) to use/not use printer metrics to
lay out the screen display; to use/not use Asian line breaks; and a
couple other settings that seemed logical. I even forced Word to use
Times New Roman for all the Asian fonts. No luck.
* Since you asked <g>, it's a very cool economic model that applies
thermodynamics principles in general, and entropy in particular, to
model the urban environment as if it were an organism with a
metabolism. I understand it well enough to rewrite it, much to my
pleased surprise. And yes, that constitutes bragging. <g>
I've also tried exporting the file to RTF and reimporting it, but this
crashes Word big time; I suspect it's the embedded equations, which I
can't afford to simply delete, and it would be time-consuming in the
extreme to manually delete and reinsert them.
Any suggestions (particularly from people who work regularly with Asian
files using North American or European versions of Word) on how I can
solve this problem once and for all? Upgrading to Word 2004 is a
possibility, but not one I'm eager to try; this is the equivalent to
Word XP on the PC, which is the version that just about made revision
tracking unusable. Xie xie nin!
--Geoff Hart ghart -at- videotron -dot- ca
(try geoffhart -at- mac -dot- com if you don't get a reply)
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