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We can create three different types of links within OneNote 07. However, everyone just calls them all "Links" which can be confusing. I propose that we start calling them:
Icon Link - Points to a file. Displays an icon and the file name. Creating these links copies the file to a special folder created by OneNote which is a sub-folder of the folder containing the section that contains the Icon Link. These sub-folders are named after the section with "_onefiles" appended to the end of the section name. Icon Links are updated as the section or page is moved around. The special _onefiles folder also seems to get moved with the section. You can even just cut and paste the icon itself to a different section in OneNote 07 and OneNote will move the file to that new section's _onefiles folder (creating one if necessary). In this way you can effectively forget where the file is actually stored and think of it as just being "in OneNote." It is possible to open the actual original file from its original location by right clicking on this kind of link. However, I always just delete the original so I only have one copy of the file which I let OneNote store in the _onefiles folder (not counting the multiple backups created by a bug which has been fixed). I use this for reference material that I will usually only want access to from within OneNote. Things like scans of articles that support the topic I am taking notes about within OneNote. I don't use it for other documents I create that I store independently like letters or papers I write. For those I use the next kind of link. (However, I am probably going to start putting more and more things directly into OneNote so they will be right with all my other notes related to that document. Before long my My Documents folder will be pretty empty.)
Text Link - This is just a specially formatted string of text that one could type by hand if one had the patience. Before ON 07 I used a program called ClipName that would load the clipboard with that specially formatted string so I could insert that into any program I wanted. Any program that recognizes links in text works with this kind of link. However, Text Links are static. If you move the page or section the link stays the same which is good because the original file probably didn't move. If you had the original file stored in the same folder hierarchy as your ON notebooks then that file IS NOT moved when you move the section or folder. (However, I have noticed, if you put a file directly into a _onefiles folder then that file will be moved with the rest of the files in that folder if you move the whole section. I don't recommend this because you may move a page associated with that document but that non- linked-to-document will not be moved with the page and could get lost. Also, if you move the section it will move the file but not update any text links to the file which would break those links.) You should not use text links to files whose location may change later.
HyperLink - This is the kind of link that is created using the hyperlink dialog (which you get to by pressing ctrl-k). Technically, this link can go to either a file or a part of OneNote, or even a regular URL. The primary visible difference is that you can specify the text that appears in line and the actual link is hidden behind that text. These links are static. If you move the file then the link in broken. <Speculation Mode - On> Some may think they are dynamic because you can move a linked to paragraph or section and the link won't break. This is likely due to the way OneNote references the paragraphs. That long code you see when you paste a link to a paragraph into the hyperlink dialog uniquely identifies the paragraph. Even if you move the paragraph, that unique code stays the same. OneNote just looks for this unique code rather than a specific path within your notebooks. <Speculation Mode - OFF>
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