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Author Topic: Merging Word documents  (Read 10851 times)

m_s

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Merging Word documents
« on: July 30, 2008, 06:57 AM »
I'm pretty sure that somebody helped me with a similar question a few years ago, but I'm not finding it with a search of the forums.  Forgive me for repeating myself...

I need to combine several Word files into a single file.  I'm pretty sure the solution last time involved using a command prompt and it worked very well...  But for the life of me...

Thanks (again) for any help anybody offers...

Carol Haynes

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Re: Merging Word documents
« Reply #1 on: July 30, 2008, 07:22 AM »
Don't know that solution but isn't it pretty quick to use copy and paste into a single document?

Here is an article from the Word Help System on comparing and combining

compare and combine
Compare and combine documents in Word 2007
Microsoft Office Word 2007 Inside Out
By Katherine Murray, Mary Millhollon, and Beth Melton

Katherine Murray has authored and coauthored more than 40 computer books with several Microsoft Office titles to her credit, including Faster Smarter Microsoft Office System—2003 Edition, First Look Microsoft Office 2003, Faster Smarter Microsoft Office XP, and Microsoft Word Version 2002 Inside Out. She is also a columnist on the Microsoft Office Community site on www.microsoft.com. Katherine specializes in teaching people and businesses how to communicate effectively by using print and electronic media.

Mary Millhollon is an expert Web designer, developer, and content specialist with years of experience in the publishing industry, including books, magazines, newspapers, and courseware. She is also a writer, editor, and instructor who has authored and coauthored several popular books about Microsoft Office and the Web, including Microsoft Word Version 2002 Inside Out and Faster Smarter Web Page Creation. She is the owner of Bughouse Productions.

Beth Melton has been a computer instructor and developer since January 1995. Along with developing custom Microsoft Office solutions for a wide range of clients and instructing computer classes for local area colleges, she writes regularly on the Microsoft Office applications for Web sites including Microsoft Office Online, TechTrax Online Magazine, The Word MVP Site, and the Microsoft Knowledge Base. Beth has been a Microsoft Office MVP since 2000 and is a Microsoft Office Specialist Master Instructor.

To learn more about other books on the 2007 Microsoft Office system, visit Microsoft Press.


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In this article

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Comparing or combining documents
Comparing two versions of a document (legal blackline)
Combining revisions from multiple authors
Confidential revisions

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As you probably know, many finished documents (including this book!) reflect the efforts of a group of people who worked together to create a polished product. For example, you might be involved with a single document that was written by an author, modified by an editor, commented on by a technical reviewer, and inspected and approved by a project manager. Such team collaboration can be simplified tremendously by using the markup tools available in Microsoft Office Word 2007. This article introduces you to Compare and Combine, which is one notable enhancement to the markup features in Word 2007.

Comparing or combining documents
Compare and Combine provides enhanced options for specifying the types of changes you want to compare or merge, such as formatting and white space, along with displaying changes at the word or character level. This option can be useful if you want to expedite a reviewing process by sending separate copies of an original document to reviewers. Then, when reviewers return the documents, you can combine the changes into one document. At other times, you might want to compare two versions of a document and simply look at the differences between the two documents or take advantage of the new revision features for tables.

 Note    Assume that you have a document that contains tracked changes. If you want to see changes made to tables using the new Table revision functionality but no longer have the original document, create a copy of the document and reject all changes. This produces an original copy of the document that you can use with either the Compare or Combine features.

Although Compare and Combine appear to provide the same functionality, there is a distinct difference between them: Compare is used when comparing the differences between two documents, and Combine is used when comparing two or more documents as well as identifying who changed what in the document.

Compare and Combine were available in previous versions of Word under a single command, Compare and Merge Documents. Legal Blackline (Compare) was an option in the Merge Changes dialog box. In Word 2007, the Compare and Combine commands are distinct and contain more flexibility. You can specify the types of changes you want to compare, such as formatting and white space, along with displaying changes at the word or character level. The Combine and Compare features can be found on the Reviewing tab in the Compare group.

 Note    A character-level change occurs when a change is made to a few characters of a word, such as when only the case of the first letter is changed. At the word level, the entire word is shown as a revision; at the character level, only the letter is shown as a revision.


The following section describes comparing and combining documents after changes have been made to a document.


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Comparing two versions of a document (legal blackline)


Ideally, when you use Compare, the original and the revised document don't contain tracked changes. If either document contains tracked changes, Word treats the documents as though the changes have been accepted and doesn't display them in the comparison document. Additionally, all revisions in the comparison document are attributed to a single author, and you can see what changes have been made to the original document regardless of whether track changes were turned on when modifications were being made. The changes made in the revised document are shown in the original as tracked changes. To compare two versions of one document and view the differences, follow these steps:

On the Review tab, click Compare, and then from the list, click Compare. The Compare Documents dialog box opens.
In the Original document area, click the Folder icon to navigate to and select the original document, or select the document from the drop-down list.
In the Revised document area, click the Folder icon to navigate to and select the revised document, or select the document from the drop-down list.
Click More to show the Compare Documents options. Verify that New document is selected in the Show changes in area (you can also choose to show changes in the original or revised document), as shown in Figure 1.


Figure 1 The Compare Documents dialog box enables you to choose two documents to compare—an original and a revised version.

Click OK. The original and revised documents remain unaltered and a new Compared Document is created and shown automatically.
 Note    If either (or both) of the documents being compared has tracked changes, you'll see a message box stating that Word will compare the documents as if the tracked changes have been accepted. Click Yes to continue the comparing procedure.

To view all three versions of the document at once, click Show Source Documents on the Review tab, and then click Show Both. In this view, the original, revised, and compared documents are displayed in the new Tri-Pane Review Panel, as shown in Figure 2.


Figure 2 The new Tri-Pane Review Panel displays the original, revised, and comparison results on the screen at the same time.

The new Compared Document displays the changed text in an unnamed document file. You need to save and name the file if you want to store it for future use.

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Combining revisions from multiple authors
In contrast, you use Combine to combine, or merge, two or more documents. All modifications made to the original or revised documents become tracked changes. Unlike the Compare feature, if the revised document contains tracked changes, these changes appear as tracked changes in the combined document. All authors are identified and their revisions are combined into one document. To use the Combine function, use the following steps:

On the Review tab, click Compare, and then click Combine. The Combine Documents dialog box opens, which looks similar to the Compare Documents dialog box shown in Figure 1.
In the Original document area, click the Folder icon to navigate to and select the original document, or select the document from the drop-down list.
In the Revised document area, click the Folder icon to navigate to and select the revised document (or select the document from the drop-down list) and then click OK. Figure 3 depicts a sample combination in which Original Contract.docx is combined with Modified Contract.docx, which results in the Combined Document.


Figure 3 The Original Contract.docx is combined with Modified Contract.docx, which creates a third document, Combined Document, containing the merged changes.
 Tip   If you do not see the Tri-Pane Review panel, on the Review tab, click Show Source Documents and then click Show Both.
To combine additional documents, combine the resulting Combined Document with another document containing changes.

 Note    At times, you might want to compare two documents side-by-side without merging them. In those cases, you should adjust your view without using the Compare or Combine features.



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Confidential revisions
The Compare function can also be used as a tool to keep reviewer names, dates, and times of revisions confidential. If you no longer have an original copy of a document containing tracked changes, simply create a copy of the document, reject all changes, and use it as the original. Display the Compare dialog box and select the original and the revised documents. In the Revised area in the Label Changes With text box, type another name, such as Reviewer. This method does not allow you to change the dates and times of revisions, but all revision dates and times reflect the system date and time that the Compare function was used. Note that this doesn't apply to Comments that may be contained in the documents.


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This article may help too: http://www.mydigital...ft-office-word-2007/

Grorgy

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Re: Merging Word documents
« Reply #2 on: July 30, 2008, 08:08 AM »
I dont know if you can still do it, and i cant find it easily now, but you used to be able to use an include command, include and the file name, we used it to set up chapters in a user manual, each file could be updated individually, and each was quite small, 10 pages max, but the whole document once combined was 500 or 600 pages long.  ahhh here it is, it doesnt mention it as working in 2007 but it may

http://wordtips.vita..._Word_Documents.html

Word provides a very easy way to combine documents, without the typical cut-and-paste routine. This is great for boilerplate text in your document. All you need to do is use the INCLUDETEXT field within a document. Follow these steps:

   1. Insert a pair of field braces by pressing CTRL+F9.
   2. Within the field braces type INCLUDETEXT, followed by a space and the name of the document you want to include. For instance, if I wanted to include MyFile.Doc, I my field would look as follows:

      { INCLUDETEXT "MyFile.Doc" }

   3. Press F9 to update the field.

At the point, the specified file should appear within your document. If it doesn't (for instance, if you get an error message), then make sure you typed the document name correctly, and that you included a full path name. (You must include the full path name if the document is in a directory different from the one in which the current document is located.)

Perry Mowbray

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Re: Merging Word documents
« Reply #3 on: July 30, 2008, 08:30 AM »
Grorgy's quoted solution was the type that came to my mind initially, though "combine" can have a couple of different meanings/methods (as Carol's post highlights).

I guess it depends on if you're wanting to combine different versions of the same document together or combine different parts of a document.

With INCLUDETEXT you can Merge the document to a new document to actually insert the text into the document.

Carol Haynes

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Re: Merging Word documents
« Reply #4 on: July 30, 2008, 09:45 AM »
There is also a 'Master Document' method hinted at in the Word help files - I haven't looked but I guess it is probably the ( INCLUDETEXT ... } method or similar.

Try http://office.micros.../HP051870021033.aspx

m_s

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Re: Merging Word documents
« Reply #5 on: July 31, 2008, 05:30 AM »
Thanks all for your suggestions...  It turns out the original documents are - as so very often - a dog's dinner of different styles, which means the output document turns out to have its fonts and styles all messed up.  I think I need to get my author to go back to the drawing board and rebuild this from scratch...

lanux128

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Re: Merging Word documents
« Reply #6 on: July 31, 2008, 08:55 PM »
@m_s: i haven't tried this yet but i believe a tool like 'Chapter by Chapter' (CbC) can be helpful in a situation like yours. This app could be used to add individual files in a treeview (see pic) then output them as one single big file.

main-CBC-sh.png
introduced by Tom Colvin in this thread.

Dormouse

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Re: Merging Word documents
« Reply #7 on: August 01, 2008, 05:20 AM »
Chapter by Chapter[/url]' (CbC) can be helpful in a situation like yours. This app could be used to add individual files in a treeview (see pic) then output them as one single big file.

Hadn't known about this, seemed interesting, so I tried it.

Works, but concatenating Word (.doc files not 2007 format) is all it does (with a helpful note section at the bottom of the page for each file). Produces a concatenated .doc file which can be worked on in word. Only works with .doc files (well, can use RTF files, but cannot mix doc and RTF files).

I checked the box to make it appear in the taskbar, but never succeeded in getting it there. Which made finding it again a pain when it was overlaid with other windows. SOLVED - For new settings to take effect, the program has to be rebooted. I thought I had done this by closing it and restarting it from the file system, but I hadn't. It was sitting in the system tray all the time (so I didn't really need to change the settings anyway  :-[ ).

Also needs all the files to be in the same folder it is set up to work in. It doesn't seem possible to change this setting after installation.

Still, it does meet the OP's need, and surely, if everything is in the same file, it shouldn't be too much work to restyle the document.
« Last Edit: August 01, 2008, 05:33 AM by Dormouse »

lanux128

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Re: Merging Word documents
« Reply #8 on: August 01, 2008, 09:50 AM »
from the website, it's obvious that the author (Sebastien) uses the program extensively.in the FAQ, he welcomes any suggestions or feature request. :)

What if I need something CbC doesn't do ?

Please drop me an e-mail.
-faq

Bronislawa

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Re: Merging Word documents
« Reply #9 on: August 17, 2008, 09:50 PM »
Twins File Merger can easily merge word documents, mp3, mpeg and text files. It works pretty fine for me. So you can try it if you wish.