WD97: General Information About Web Page Authoring
ID: Q159948
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The information in this article applies to:
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Microsoft Word 97 for Windows
SUMMARY
This article answers the most frequently asked questions about Web page
authoring in Word 97.
MORE INFORMATION- Q. Can I configure the FrontPage Explorer to use Word as its Web
page editor?
A. Yes. For additional information about how to do this, please see the
following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q143095 Configuring FrontPage to Use an HTML Editor Other Than Explorer
- Q. Can I publish the Web pages that I create in Word to an intranet or
Internet server?
A. Yes. You can use the Microsoft Web Publishing Wizard to publish Web
pages either to an intranet or to an internet server. The Web
Publishing Wizard is stored in the Webpost.exe file located in the
ValuPack\WebPost folder on the Microsoft Office 97 or Microsoft Word
97 CD-ROM. The Webpost.exe file is a self-extracting, self-
executing program. To install the Web Publishing Wizard, use the
following steps:
- On the Windows taskbar, click Start.
- Click Run.
- In the Open box, click Browse, select the ValuPack\WebPost folder
on the CD-ROM drive, select the Webpost.exe file, and then click
Open.
- Click OK.
For more information about the Web Publishing Wizard, go to the
Microsoft Web site:
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/software/Webpost/wp2.htm
If you are not using the Web Publishing Wizard, contact your
Internet service provider, Web master, or network administrator for
information about how to publish your Web content.
- Q. Can I use third-party ActiveX controls or controls that I download
from the Microsoft Web site when I create Web pages in Word?
A. Word adheres to an earlier version of the ActiveX Control standard
and requires services that some ActiveX controls for the Web do not
support. Although you may be able to insert these controls in your
documents, they are not guaranteed to work reliably. You can
reliably use controls built using Visual Basic 5.0 or the Visual Basic
Control Creation Edition and controls designed for Visual Basic 4.0.
For additional information, please see the following article in the
Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q155903 Error Inserting ActiveX Control
- Q. When I create a page in Word that uses tables, the page looks
different in a Web browser than it does in Word. When can I expect
there to be differences and how can I fix them?
A. In general, tables you create in Word look the same in Word as they
do in a Web browser if that browser supports tables. (Microsoft
Internet Explorer 2.0 and later or Netscape 2.0 and later support
tables.) The following table layouts are displayed differently in
Word than they are in a Web browser:
- Tables that contain cells of unequal width appear to have equal
width cells in Word. For additional information, please see the
following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q159549 Different-Width Cells Display as Equal-Width Cells in Browser
- Tables are not automatically adjusted to fit within the document
window. For additional information, please see the following
article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q159866 How to Set Table Width to Percentage of Browser Window
- Pictures contained within table cells whose dimensions are not
specified may appear truncated on the right. This problem occurs
because Word resizes the cell to a default width. To display the
entire picture, resize the table column.
- Horizontal lines do not appear in Word when placed inside a table.
- Q. Does Word 97 support nested tables?
A. No. For additional information, please see the following article in
the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q157774 Word 97 Can't Open HTML Document with Nested Tables
Additional query words:
Keywords :
Version : WINDOWS:97
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type :
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