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Thread: DOC or DOT for emailed forms?

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DOC or DOT for emailed forms?
"David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> 27.01.2006 16:37:33
I am sending to participants in a survey a simple MS Word document
containing checkboxes and text form fields . (There's no VBA in it, but this
newsgroup seems the most relevant.)

I am asking recipients to fill out the form, save the file and send it back
as an email attachment.

All help from Microsoft and other sources recommends sending the file as a
Word template (.dot) rather than as a normal .doc. Can someone explain the
advantage of doing this? If someone completes a file sent as a .dot and then
does a "Save As", they will find themselves looking at their Templates
folder -- a place that most users rarely visit that is deeply buried in the
disk structure.

So why not use the normal .doc extension?

Thanks.

David


Re: DOC or DOT for emailed forms?
"Anne Troy" <ng[ at ]officearticles.com> 27.01.2006 17:16:19
David: Most people distributing forms are distributing them for use by the
user over and over again (usually within the company). Sounds to me like
yours is a "once and done" so that distributing as a DOT is rather silly. I
would send it as a DOC. Also, default double-click action on a DOT is to
create a new file from the DOT (document 1), but I didn't test and don't
know if that's the case when they double-click the attachment from their
email.
************
Hope it helps!
Anne Troy
www.OfficeArticles.com

"David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
news:uKuB%23$1IGHA.2896[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
[Quoted Text]
>I am sending to participants in a survey a simple MS Word document
>containing checkboxes and text form fields . (There's no VBA in it, but
>this newsgroup seems the most relevant.)
>
> I am asking recipients to fill out the form, save the file and send it
> back as an email attachment.
>
> All help from Microsoft and other sources recommends sending the file as a
> Word template (.dot) rather than as a normal .doc. Can someone explain the
> advantage of doing this? If someone completes a file sent as a .dot and
> then does a "Save As", they will find themselves looking at their
> Templates folder -- a place that most users rarely visit that is deeply
> buried in the disk structure.
>
> So why not use the normal .doc extension?
>
> Thanks.
>
> David
>


Re: DOC or DOT for emailed forms?
"David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> 27.01.2006 18:44:57
Thanks, Anne, I'm sending it as a doc.

Best wishes,

David

"Anne Troy" <ng[ at ]officearticles.com> wrote in message
news:%231WTmV2IGHA.3120[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
[Quoted Text]
> David: Most people distributing forms are distributing them for use by the
> user over and over again (usually within the company). Sounds to me like
> yours is a "once and done" so that distributing as a DOT is rather silly.
> I would send it as a DOC. Also, default double-click action on a DOT is to
> create a new file from the DOT (document 1), but I didn't test and don't
> know if that's the case when they double-click the attachment from their
> email.
> ************
> Hope it helps!
> Anne Troy
> www.OfficeArticles.com
>
> "David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
> news:uKuB%23$1IGHA.2896[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
>>I am sending to participants in a survey a simple MS Word document
>>containing checkboxes and text form fields . (There's no VBA in it, but
>>this newsgroup seems the most relevant.)
>>
>> I am asking recipients to fill out the form, save the file and send it
>> back as an email attachment.
>>
>> All help from Microsoft and other sources recommends sending the file as
>> a Word template (.dot) rather than as a normal .doc. Can someone explain
>> the advantage of doing this? If someone completes a file sent as a .dot
>> and then does a "Save As", they will find themselves looking at their
>> Templates folder -- a place that most users rarely visit that is deeply
>> buried in the disk structure.
>>
>> So why not use the normal .doc extension?
>>
>> Thanks.
>>
>> David
>>
>
>


Re: DOC or DOT for emailed forms?
"Anne Troy" <ng[ at ]officearticles.com> 27.01.2006 19:00:45
You're welcome!
************
Hope it helps!
Anne Troy
www.OfficeArticles.com

"David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
news:emlTjH3IGHA.140[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
[Quoted Text]
> Thanks, Anne, I'm sending it as a doc.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> David
>
> "Anne Troy" <ng[ at ]officearticles.com> wrote in message
> news:%231WTmV2IGHA.3120[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
>> David: Most people distributing forms are distributing them for use by
>> the user over and over again (usually within the company). Sounds to me
>> like yours is a "once and done" so that distributing as a DOT is rather
>> silly. I would send it as a DOC. Also, default double-click action on a
>> DOT is to create a new file from the DOT (document 1), but I didn't test
>> and don't know if that's the case when they double-click the attachment
>> from their email.
>> ************
>> Hope it helps!
>> Anne Troy
>> www.OfficeArticles.com
>>
>> "David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
>> news:uKuB%23$1IGHA.2896[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
>>>I am sending to participants in a survey a simple MS Word document
>>>containing checkboxes and text form fields . (There's no VBA in it, but
>>>this newsgroup seems the most relevant.)
>>>
>>> I am asking recipients to fill out the form, save the file and send it
>>> back as an email attachment.
>>>
>>> All help from Microsoft and other sources recommends sending the file as
>>> a Word template (.dot) rather than as a normal .doc. Can someone explain
>>> the advantage of doing this? If someone completes a file sent as a .dot
>>> and then does a "Save As", they will find themselves looking at their
>>> Templates folder -- a place that most users rarely visit that is deeply
>>> buried in the disk structure.
>>>
>>> So why not use the normal .doc extension?
>>>
>>> Thanks.
>>>
>>> David
>>>
>>
>>
>
>


Re: DOC or DOT for emailed forms?
"Doug Robbins - Word MVP" <dkr[ at ]REMOVETHISmvps.org> 27.01.2006 20:40:06
Just out of interest can you advise where the the "help from Microsoft
<snip> recommends sending the file as a Word template (.dot) rather than as
a normal .doc"

--
Hope this helps.

Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my
services on a paid consulting basis.

Doug Robbins - Word MVP

"David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
news:uKuB%23$1IGHA.2896[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
[Quoted Text]
>I am sending to participants in a survey a simple MS Word document
>containing checkboxes and text form fields . (There's no VBA in it, but
>this newsgroup seems the most relevant.)
>
> I am asking recipients to fill out the form, save the file and send it
> back as an email attachment.
>
> All help from Microsoft and other sources recommends sending the file as a
> Word template (.dot) rather than as a normal .doc. Can someone explain the
> advantage of doing this? If someone completes a file sent as a .dot and
> then does a "Save As", they will find themselves looking at their
> Templates folder -- a place that most users rarely visit that is deeply
> buried in the disk structure.
>
> So why not use the normal .doc extension?
>
> Thanks.
>
> David
>


Re: DOC or DOT for emailed forms?
"David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> 29.01.2006 05:38:01
Doug - In Microsoft Office Word 2003 SP1, see the Help topic "Create forms
that users complete in Word".

David

"Doug Robbins - Word MVP" <dkr[ at ]REMOVETHISmvps.org> wrote in message
news:OTtodH4IGHA.3408[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
[Quoted Text]
> Just out of interest can you advise where the the "help from Microsoft
> <snip> recommends sending the file as a Word template (.dot) rather than
> as a normal .doc"
>
> --
> Hope this helps.
>
> Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my
> services on a paid consulting basis.
>
> Doug Robbins - Word MVP
>
> "David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
> news:uKuB%23$1IGHA.2896[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
>>I am sending to participants in a survey a simple MS Word document
>>containing checkboxes and text form fields . (There's no VBA in it, but
>>this newsgroup seems the most relevant.)
>>
>> I am asking recipients to fill out the form, save the file and send it
>> back as an email attachment.
>>
>> All help from Microsoft and other sources recommends sending the file as
>> a Word template (.dot) rather than as a normal .doc. Can someone explain
>> the advantage of doing this? If someone completes a file sent as a .dot
>> and then does a "Save As", they will find themselves looking at their
>> Templates folder -- a place that most users rarely visit that is deeply
>> buried in the disk structure.
>>
>> So why not use the normal .doc extension?
>>
>> Thanks.
>>
>> David
>>
>
>


Re: DOC or DOT for emailed forms?
"Anne Troy" <ng[ at ]officearticles.com> 29.01.2006 06:24:10
I'll be darned.
************
Anne Troy
www.OfficeArticles.com

"David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
news:Oxc1xYJJGHA.1368[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
[Quoted Text]
> Doug - In Microsoft Office Word 2003 SP1, see the Help topic "Create forms
> that users complete in Word".
>
> David
>
> "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" <dkr[ at ]REMOVETHISmvps.org> wrote in message
> news:OTtodH4IGHA.3408[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
>> Just out of interest can you advise where the the "help from Microsoft
>> <snip> recommends sending the file as a Word template (.dot) rather than
>> as a normal .doc"
>>
>> --
>> Hope this helps.
>>
>> Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my
>> services on a paid consulting basis.
>>
>> Doug Robbins - Word MVP
>>
>> "David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
>> news:uKuB%23$1IGHA.2896[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
>>>I am sending to participants in a survey a simple MS Word document
>>>containing checkboxes and text form fields . (There's no VBA in it, but
>>>this newsgroup seems the most relevant.)
>>>
>>> I am asking recipients to fill out the form, save the file and send it
>>> back as an email attachment.
>>>
>>> All help from Microsoft and other sources recommends sending the file as
>>> a Word template (.dot) rather than as a normal .doc. Can someone explain
>>> the advantage of doing this? If someone completes a file sent as a .dot
>>> and then does a "Save As", they will find themselves looking at their
>>> Templates folder -- a place that most users rarely visit that is deeply
>>> buried in the disk structure.
>>>
>>> So why not use the normal .doc extension?
>>>
>>> Thanks.
>>>
>>> David
>>>
>>
>>
>
>


Re: DOC or DOT for emailed forms?
Jay Freedman <jay.freedman[ at ]verizon.net> 29.01.2006 16:07:49
[Quoted Text]
>I'll be darned.
Me too. :-)

I think the answer is that the help topic also recommends adding
macros ("Automate your form" under step 7), and macros in ordinary
documents trigger the macro security mechanism. Using a template
sidesteps that problem, but it forces the form to save in the
Templates folder. There really isn't any good solution to this dilemma
if you need macros in your form.

Where the help topic oversimplifies is that if you don't use any
macros (and also avoid the ActiveX controls in the Control Toolbox),
then an ordinary document is perfectly usable.

--
Regards,
Jay Freedman
Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the
newsgroup so all may benefit.

On Sun, 29 Jan 2006 01:24:10 -0500, "Anne Troy"
<ng[ at ]officearticles.com> wrote:

>I'll be darned.
>************
>Anne Troy
>www.OfficeArticles.com
>
>"David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
>news:Oxc1xYJJGHA.1368[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
>> Doug - In Microsoft Office Word 2003 SP1, see the Help topic "Create forms
>> that users complete in Word".
>>
>> David
>>
>> "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" <dkr[ at ]REMOVETHISmvps.org> wrote in message
>> news:OTtodH4IGHA.3408[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
>>> Just out of interest can you advise where the the "help from Microsoft
>>> <snip> recommends sending the file as a Word template (.dot) rather than
>>> as a normal .doc"
>>>
>>> --
>>> Hope this helps.
>>>
>>> Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my
>>> services on a paid consulting basis.
>>>
>>> Doug Robbins - Word MVP
>>>
>>> "David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
>>> news:uKuB%23$1IGHA.2896[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
>>>>I am sending to participants in a survey a simple MS Word document
>>>>containing checkboxes and text form fields . (There's no VBA in it, but
>>>>this newsgroup seems the most relevant.)
>>>>
>>>> I am asking recipients to fill out the form, save the file and send it
>>>> back as an email attachment.
>>>>
>>>> All help from Microsoft and other sources recommends sending the file as
>>>> a Word template (.dot) rather than as a normal .doc. Can someone explain
>>>> the advantage of doing this? If someone completes a file sent as a .dot
>>>> and then does a "Save As", they will find themselves looking at their
>>>> Templates folder -- a place that most users rarely visit that is deeply
>>>> buried in the disk structure.
>>>>
>>>> So why not use the normal .doc extension?
>>>>
>>>> Thanks.
>>>>
>>>> David
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
Re: DOC or DOT for emailed forms?
"Anne Troy" <ng[ at ]officearticles.com> 29.01.2006 17:50:26
Yeah, and right now, I'm trying to make a (better than MS's) cookbook
template. I want to use autotext, yet I don't want to distribute it as a
template because it's likely they'll only use it once. So, instead, I'm
including in the instructions how to make their own autotext entry.
************
Hope it helps!
Anne Troy
www.OfficeArticles.com

"Jay Freedman" <jay.freedman[ at ]verizon.net> wrote in message
news:17ppt1tfdc7n6eljia7hgddtksaa39ujjj[ at ]4ax.com...
[Quoted Text]
> >I'll be darned.
> Me too. :-)
>
> I think the answer is that the help topic also recommends adding
> macros ("Automate your form" under step 7), and macros in ordinary
> documents trigger the macro security mechanism. Using a template
> sidesteps that problem, but it forces the form to save in the
> Templates folder. There really isn't any good solution to this dilemma
> if you need macros in your form.
>
> Where the help topic oversimplifies is that if you don't use any
> macros (and also avoid the ActiveX controls in the Control Toolbox),
> then an ordinary document is perfectly usable.
>
> --
> Regards,
> Jay Freedman
> Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org
> Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the
> newsgroup so all may benefit.
>
> On Sun, 29 Jan 2006 01:24:10 -0500, "Anne Troy"
> <ng[ at ]officearticles.com> wrote:
>
>>I'll be darned.
>>************
>>Anne Troy
>>www.OfficeArticles.com
>>
>>"David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
>>news:Oxc1xYJJGHA.1368[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
>>> Doug - In Microsoft Office Word 2003 SP1, see the Help topic "Create
>>> forms
>>> that users complete in Word".
>>>
>>> David
>>>
>>> "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" <dkr[ at ]REMOVETHISmvps.org> wrote in message
>>> news:OTtodH4IGHA.3408[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
>>>> Just out of interest can you advise where the the "help from Microsoft
>>>> <snip> recommends sending the file as a Word template (.dot) rather
>>>> than
>>>> as a normal .doc"
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Hope this helps.
>>>>
>>>> Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my
>>>> services on a paid consulting basis.
>>>>
>>>> Doug Robbins - Word MVP
>>>>
>>>> "David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
>>>> news:uKuB%23$1IGHA.2896[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
>>>>>I am sending to participants in a survey a simple MS Word document
>>>>>containing checkboxes and text form fields . (There's no VBA in it, but
>>>>>this newsgroup seems the most relevant.)
>>>>>
>>>>> I am asking recipients to fill out the form, save the file and send it
>>>>> back as an email attachment.
>>>>>
>>>>> All help from Microsoft and other sources recommends sending the file
>>>>> as
>>>>> a Word template (.dot) rather than as a normal .doc. Can someone
>>>>> explain
>>>>> the advantage of doing this? If someone completes a file sent as a
>>>>> .dot
>>>>> and then does a "Save As", they will find themselves looking at their
>>>>> Templates folder -- a place that most users rarely visit that is
>>>>> deeply
>>>>> buried in the disk structure.
>>>>>
>>>>> So why not use the normal .doc extension?
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks.
>>>>>
>>>>> David
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>


Re: DOC or DOT for emailed forms?
"Tony Jollans" <My Forename at My Surname dot com> 29.01.2006 18:04:28
I'm not entirely sure I follow, Jay. Code in a template will trigger the
same macro warnings as code in a document. It may not on the machine it is
created on if it is saved in a trusted location (not forced - just
defaulted), but if sent as an attachment and 'opened' directly from the
e-mail, it will.

Also, if you e-mail a template, 'opening' it from the e-mail will create a
new document (not the template itself as seems to be being suggested by
David) which can't accidentally be saved in a temporary location and then
possibly lost - it must be explicitly saved somewhere (and will default to
My Documents or whatever default the recipient has set on their machine).
This seems to nicely sidestep the generally recommended practice of saving
attachments and opening the saved copy.

If the new document is returned to the sender they still have the template
it goes with. I'm not sure I see why you're all surprised by the
recommendation.

--
Enjoy,
Tony


"Jay Freedman" <jay.freedman[ at ]verizon.net> wrote in message
news:17ppt1tfdc7n6eljia7hgddtksaa39ujjj[ at ]4ax.com...
[Quoted Text]
> >I'll be darned.
> Me too. :-)
>
> I think the answer is that the help topic also recommends adding
> macros ("Automate your form" under step 7), and macros in ordinary
> documents trigger the macro security mechanism. Using a template
> sidesteps that problem, but it forces the form to save in the
> Templates folder. There really isn't any good solution to this dilemma
> if you need macros in your form.
>
> Where the help topic oversimplifies is that if you don't use any
> macros (and also avoid the ActiveX controls in the Control Toolbox),
> then an ordinary document is perfectly usable.
>
> --
> Regards,
> Jay Freedman
> Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org
> Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the
> newsgroup so all may benefit.
>
> On Sun, 29 Jan 2006 01:24:10 -0500, "Anne Troy"
> <ng[ at ]officearticles.com> wrote:
>
> >I'll be darned.
> >************
> >Anne Troy
> >www.OfficeArticles.com
> >
> >"David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
> >news:Oxc1xYJJGHA.1368[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
> >> Doug - In Microsoft Office Word 2003 SP1, see the Help topic "Create
forms
> >> that users complete in Word".
> >>
> >> David
> >>
> >> "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" <dkr[ at ]REMOVETHISmvps.org> wrote in message
> >> news:OTtodH4IGHA.3408[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
> >>> Just out of interest can you advise where the the "help from Microsoft
> >>> <snip> recommends sending the file as a Word template (.dot) rather
than
> >>> as a normal .doc"
> >>>
> >>> --
> >>> Hope this helps.
> >>>
> >>> Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my
> >>> services on a paid consulting basis.
> >>>
> >>> Doug Robbins - Word MVP
> >>>
> >>> "David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
> >>> news:uKuB%23$1IGHA.2896[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
> >>>>I am sending to participants in a survey a simple MS Word document
> >>>>containing checkboxes and text form fields . (There's no VBA in it,
but
> >>>>this newsgroup seems the most relevant.)
> >>>>
> >>>> I am asking recipients to fill out the form, save the file and send
it
> >>>> back as an email attachment.
> >>>>
> >>>> All help from Microsoft and other sources recommends sending the file
as
> >>>> a Word template (.dot) rather than as a normal .doc. Can someone
explain
> >>>> the advantage of doing this? If someone completes a file sent as a
..dot
> >>>> and then does a "Save As", they will find themselves looking at their
> >>>> Templates folder -- a place that most users rarely visit that is
deeply
> >>>> buried in the disk structure.
> >>>>
> >>>> So why not use the normal .doc extension?
> >>>>
> >>>> Thanks.
> >>>>
> >>>> David
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>
> >>
> >


Re: DOC or DOT for emailed forms?
Jay Freedman <jay.freedman[ at ]verizon.net> 30.01.2006 01:50:10
Hi Tony,

Obviously I hadn't tried out the process or thought it all the way
through. I've tried it now, mailing myself a template from my work PC
to home. Your observations are all correct.

For some reason I was thinking that a template mailed as an attachment
should be saved in the Templates folder, where it would (usually) be
trusted. Of course, most users wouldn't think to do that; if they
saved it at all, it would probably be in My Documents or some other
document folder where it wouldn't be trusted.

--
Regards,
Jay Freedman
Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the
newsgroup so all may benefit.

On Sun, 29 Jan 2006 18:04:28 -0000, "Tony Jollans" <My Forename at My
Surname dot com> wrote:

[Quoted Text]
>I'm not entirely sure I follow, Jay. Code in a template will trigger the
>same macro warnings as code in a document. It may not on the machine it is
>created on if it is saved in a trusted location (not forced - just
>defaulted), but if sent as an attachment and 'opened' directly from the
>e-mail, it will.
>
>Also, if you e-mail a template, 'opening' it from the e-mail will create a
>new document (not the template itself as seems to be being suggested by
>David) which can't accidentally be saved in a temporary location and then
>possibly lost - it must be explicitly saved somewhere (and will default to
>My Documents or whatever default the recipient has set on their machine).
>This seems to nicely sidestep the generally recommended practice of saving
>attachments and opening the saved copy.
>
>If the new document is returned to the sender they still have the template
>it goes with. I'm not sure I see why you're all surprised by the
>recommendation.
>
>--
>Enjoy,
>Tony
>
>
>"Jay Freedman" <jay.freedman[ at ]verizon.net> wrote in message
>news:17ppt1tfdc7n6eljia7hgddtksaa39ujjj[ at ]4ax.com...
>> >I'll be darned.
>> Me too. :-)
>>
>> I think the answer is that the help topic also recommends adding
>> macros ("Automate your form" under step 7), and macros in ordinary
>> documents trigger the macro security mechanism. Using a template
>> sidesteps that problem, but it forces the form to save in the
>> Templates folder. There really isn't any good solution to this dilemma
>> if you need macros in your form.
>>
>> Where the help topic oversimplifies is that if you don't use any
>> macros (and also avoid the ActiveX controls in the Control Toolbox),
>> then an ordinary document is perfectly usable.
>>
>> --
>> Regards,
>> Jay Freedman
>> Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org
>> Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the
>> newsgroup so all may benefit.
>>
>> On Sun, 29 Jan 2006 01:24:10 -0500, "Anne Troy"
>> <ng[ at ]officearticles.com> wrote:
>>
>> >I'll be darned.
>> >************
>> >Anne Troy
>> >www.OfficeArticles.com
>> >
>> >"David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
>> >news:Oxc1xYJJGHA.1368[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
>> >> Doug - In Microsoft Office Word 2003 SP1, see the Help topic "Create
>forms
>> >> that users complete in Word".
>> >>
>> >> David
>> >>
>> >> "Doug Robbins - Word MVP" <dkr[ at ]REMOVETHISmvps.org> wrote in message
>> >> news:OTtodH4IGHA.3408[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
>> >>> Just out of interest can you advise where the the "help from Microsoft
>> >>> <snip> recommends sending the file as a Word template (.dot) rather
>than
>> >>> as a normal .doc"
>> >>>
>> >>> --
>> >>> Hope this helps.
>> >>>
>> >>> Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my
>> >>> services on a paid consulting basis.
>> >>>
>> >>> Doug Robbins - Word MVP
>> >>>
>> >>> "David Mayerovitch" <davmay[ at ]sympatico.ca> wrote in message
>> >>> news:uKuB%23$1IGHA.2896[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
>> >>>>I am sending to participants in a survey a simple MS Word document
>> >>>>containing checkboxes and text form fields . (There's no VBA in it,
>but
>> >>>>this newsgroup seems the most relevant.)
>> >>>>
>> >>>> I am asking recipients to fill out the form, save the file and send
>it
>> >>>> back as an email attachment.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> All help from Microsoft and other sources recommends sending the file
>as
>> >>>> a Word template (.dot) rather than as a normal .doc. Can someone
>explain
>> >>>> the advantage of doing this? If someone completes a file sent as a
>.dot
>> >>>> and then does a "Save As", they will find themselves looking at their
>> >>>> Templates folder -- a place that most users rarely visit that is
>deeply
>> >>>> buried in the disk structure.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> So why not use the normal .doc extension?
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Thanks.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> David
>> >>>>
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >
>

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