>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
>> >>>>
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >
>