TNTEdit®for Microsoft Word for Windows® 97,2000 Document Information

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Creating a New TNTEdit Document


1. With File > New

  1. Open Microsoft Word®.

  2. From the File menu choose New.

  3. In the New dialog box double-click the TNTEdit icon.

  4. The TNTEdit Document Information dialog box appears.

  5. You should now have a new, empty document on the screen.

  6. You can now type text into the document or prepare an author file to used with TNTEdit.

    2. From an Open TNTEdit Document

  1. Create a new TNTEdit Document by clicking the New TNTEdit Document button on the toolbar Generate/TNTNewDoc2.jpg or by selecting File > New TNTEdit Document, or by pressing Ctrl + N.

  2. A new, empty document is created and the Document Information is transferred from the first document to the new document.

  3. You can now type text into the document or prepare an author file to used with TNTEdit.
     

    3. Copying or Moving Text to a New TNTEdit Document

Sometimes an author's manuscript may be contained in one large file. When preparing author files for keymarking you may want separate documents for front matter, chapters, tables, etc. Follow the steps below to break one file into multiple TNTEdit documents:

  1. Create a new, empty TNTEdit document following method 1 or 2 above.

  2. Follow the steps for preparing author files to insert the author file into the TNTEdit document

  3. Select the text you want to move.

  4. Click the New TNTEdit Document button on the toolbar Generate/TNTNewDoc2.jpg or select File > New TNTEdit Document from the menu. The New TNTEdit Document dialog opens:

  5. Generate/TNTNEWDOCDIALOG2.jpg

  6. Choose the Document Type you want to create: a Text document for text, Table for sections containing tables, or Art/Caption for files containing artwork and corresponding captions.

  7. Choose the Text Option.

  8. Generate/diamond.gif    Move text - moves the text from the original document to the new document

    Generate/diamond.gif    Copy text - leaves the text in the original document and copies the text to the new document

    Generate/diamond.gif    Empty document - creates a new, empty TNTEdit document and leaves the selected text alone

  9. Save the file with the next sequence number, following the TNTEdit naming conventions.

  10. Repeat steps 1-5 for each section of the original file that needs to placed into its own file.

     

    Save the document with the next sequence number in the project, following the TNTEdit naming conventions.

    At this point you can simply begin typing--using TNTEdit keymarks along the way if you wish--or you can prepare an existing file to be used with TNTEdit.

    Preparing Author Files for Use with TNTEdit

    Author files come in many different formats. When preparing author files for use with TNTEdit the best results are achieved with files saved in Rich Text Format (.rtf). Many word and text processing packages, such as WordPerfect®, offer rtf as a "save as" option. If possible, request that authors save their files as rtf before sending them to editors. Other author file formats can also be successfully prepared for use with TNTEdit, provided you have the proper import filters installed with Microsoft Word®. Consult your Word help files and documentation for more information on installing and using import filters. Once the file is prepared, all of the TNTEdit functions are available for use within the document.

    Insert Author's Files Into the TNTEdit document

Once you have a new TNTEdit Document you are ready to begin preparing your file for use with TNTEdit.

  1. From the Insert Menu choose File. The Insert File dialog box opens:

  2. Generate/InsertFile2.jpg

  3. Select the type of file you want to import from the Files of type drop-down list. Rich Text Format files are recommended. If you do not have the rtf import filter installed you should install the filter by running the Word 97® or Word 2000® setup program again. See the documentation that came with your software or contact your system administrator for assistance with installing import filters.

  4. Select the file you want to import by clicking on the file's icon.

  5. Click the OK button to insert the file.

  6. Your text should now be in the new TNTEdit document.

  7. At this point it's a good idea to scan the document for any obvious problems or errors that may have happened after the file was inserted.

    Save your document

  1. From the File menu, choose Save As.

  2. Choose a file name and location to save the file. The file should be saved using TNTEdit Naming Conventions.

  3. Preparing Author HTML Files for Use with TNTEdit

    HTML files downloaded from the internet can be converted for use with the TNTEdit just like any other word processing file.

    Saving a File From the Web

  1. Using your web browser, navigate to the web page you want to download and edit.

  2. From your browser's File menu select Save As (If you are using Internet Explorer® version 5 or higher set the Save As Type to HTML only)

  3. Save all the files you want to convert to TNTEdit.

Inserting HTML Files Into a TNTEdit Document

  1. Create a new TNTEdit Document (see above).

  2. From the Insert Menu, select File

  3. Set the Files of type: selector to All files (*.*)

  4. Select the HTML file you want to insert and click Open

  5. From the TNTEditorial menu, select Convert HTML. TNTEdit will ask if the document contains para marks at the end of every line (are there paragraph marks where line breaks occurred, not at the end of each paragraph).

  6. Generate/HTMLConvert.jpg

    If there are, click Yes and TNTEdit will fix all of the line enders. Otherwise, press No. Press Cancel to abort the operation.

  7. TNTEdit will clean up the document and insure any special characters are maintained.

You can now run AllMacsPrep and AllMacs.

 



TNTEdit®for Microsoft Word for Windows® 97,2000