SnagIt will do that, in as much as you can capture any screen or part of a screen and send it to an open document or a new document. However only one Word version can be the default because of the way Office applications share resources. You can also send the captures to a variety of other applications.
SnagIt is not free, but it is the one application I can think of that more than justifies its expense. If there is a better one, I don't know it. Was this reply helpful? Yes No. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. I'll second Graham's recommendation. In addition to providing numerous capture methods including "printing" a Word document to a graphic file and graphic file types, it also offers a wide range of editing tools for adding captions and callouts, cropping, blurring, adding effects, etc.
Thanks for your response, but I am looking for an add-on that can be installed in Microsoft Word Document.
It can save enormous amount of time if one has to take so many screenshots. Threats include any threat of suicide, violence, or harm to another. Any content of an adult theme or inappropriate to a community web site.
Any image, link, or discussion of nudity. Any behavior that is insulting, rude, vulgar, desecrating, or showing disrespect. Its pretty darn cheap to buy these days, seeing how Office will be out in the following months. Convoluted , Oct 19, You must log in or sign up to reply here. Show Ignored Content. Similar Threads - Office save.
Office laptop with weekend gaming ability? Replies: 3 Views: 1, Replies: 1 Views: Meaker Sager Oct 29, Replies: 7 Views: StormJumper Oct 21, Search the FAQ site on Google. Remember to Refresh your page. This page last revised: 05 Jan People are often directed to this page because they are receiving a query about whether they want to save changes to the attached template the normal template.
The converse of this also happens where they try to save changes to the normal template and are prevented from doing so without notice. Such changes are things like modification of styles, recorded macros, and saved AutoText or AutoCorrect. These problems are usually symptoms of a poorly-written Add-In for Word.
If in a corporate network, the problems can also be caused by group polices or automatic rewriting of the normal template. This is becoming rare as IT professionals learn of those problems. Microsoft Word, at least since Word 97, has allowed third parties, including users, to change the program's interface with the user by adding menus, toolbars, ribbons, macros, keyboard shortcuts, and other building blocks or components.
These are Word template files, created and editable in Word. Beginning with Word another kind of Add-In was allowed, a. COM Add-In. These are programs. The easiest way to make changes to the Word user interface seems to be to change that interface in the normal template. There can be multiple problems that arise when you do that. These include an alert to the user when leaving the program that changes have been made to the template and asking if those should be saved, the inability of the user to save changes to defaults, and much more rarely repeated additions of controls or buttons to the interface one added each time Word is started.
Add-Ins that do this are poorly-written. There are other ways to make the changes when the Add-In is loaded that do not trigger the alert or block the user from making their own changes. Add-Ins that cause these problems sometimes are installed as a part of the initial setup of a computer. They sometimes come with very good, useful, expensive commercial programs.
As a diagnostic, you can start Word with no Add-ins running using a command-line switch. Word has an option to alert the user if changes are about to be saved to the normal template upon exiting Word. This option should be kept on. Recent versions of Word install with this turned "off. The normal template is a key component of Word. You do not want changes made to it unless you approve them. I suspect it was turned off as a part of installation because of the number of calls to Microsoft and to corporate IT departments caused by poorly-written Add-Ins triggering the alert.
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