I am trying to export a survey to a word doc, but it looks completely different. The word document does not show half of the items I put in, instead showing generic blocks (e.g. Text / Graphic Thanks for checking out the Qualtrics Surveys Question Walkthrough! ). It only does this for the word export. The pdf export looks perfectly normal. ?
If the requirement is to export the survey in questionnaire format then the best way to export is in the pdf format. The word version will give you all blocks, logics, etc. which is necessary if you want all such details to go through.
When I export a long Confluence page to Word, all works fine at the beginning of the file (images on a Confluence page and included from other Confluence pages). After a certain number of pages (around page 17/18) the images stop exporting.
EDIT: The title of this bug might seem odd, but various people have commented on it about their problems exporting pages containing images to Word. It seems to have become the "Word export image problem" ticket.
I am wanting to export about 90 of my storyline files to word documents. I have previously done this before with other files, and I am sure that the export included to text on the slide, not just the image of the slide.
Is there a way I can do this?
Cheers,
Megan
Like Megan, I'd like to publish screen prints, notes and editable screen captions to a Word document. My company has a Legal review that we require sign-off from after we create our course. (In their opinion -- not mine -- a storyboard is not enough.) Is there a way to do this? There must be a document object model for Storyline that we can access to extract captions??
The Publish to Word would capture the screen and accompanying notes but doesn't allow for editing of what's on the screen. Perhaps using that in conjunction with an export of the closed captions (from translation so that they're easily editable) would work?
Thanks for your response. My apologies about the long response . . . I'm new to the forums, and I thought I was sending you a private reply to the business case email I submitted yesterday separately from my forum post here. I've edited my response so that it's appropriate for the forum.
For the purposes of this forum, what I am looking for is a workaround to include slide captions in the "print to Word" output document. I'm willing to use JavaScript to somehow access the caption objects or a Word macro to transfer the captions from a translation export into the course document.
Ashley suggested 360 as a review alternative, and unfortunately we can't afford the license at this time. Also, some of our internal stakeholders require us to produce a final paper review copy for their records after our course design is complete. At this point, an online review record, while wonderful in our team's minds is not yet acceptable for them.
Closed captions are relatively new for us, so I'm happy to pass along the idea about linking that text into the Word publish. Javascript isn't something I'm trained in, as our team can't offer support on it, so I'll leave that to folks here in the community to weigh in on!
It's important to save your document whenever you start a new project or make changes to an existing one. Saving early and often can prevent your work from being lost. You'll also need to pay close attention to where you save the document so it will be easy to find later.
If you want to save a different version of a document while keeping the original, you can create a copy. For example, if you have a file named Sales Report, you could save it as Sales Report 2 so you'll be able to edit the new file and still refer back to the original version.
If you don't want to use OneDrive, you may be frustrated that OneDrive is selected as the default location when saving. If you find this inconvenient, you can change the default save location so This PC is selected by default.
Word automatically saves your documents to a temporary folder while you are working on them. If you forget to save your changes or if Word crashes, you can restore the file using AutoRecover.
You may also find it helpful to export your document to other file types, like a Word 97-2003 Document if you need to share with people using an older version of Word or a .txt file if you need a plain-text version of your document.
Word makes it easy to share and collaborate on documents using OneDrive. In the past, if you wanted to share a file with someone you could send it as an email attachment. While convenient, this system also creates multiple versions of the same file, which can be difficult to organize.
When you share a document from Word, you're actually giving others access to the exact same file. This lets you and the people you share with edit the same document without having to keep track of multiple versions.
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AFAIK nope, official supported export formats are limited to PDF, PSD and common raster graphics formats. - Though selected text can maybe (with chance ) exchanged over the system pasteboard, you have to try.
Thanks for the comments. I note Microsoft Publisher can export to Word, but I guess that makes sense. I have a complex document of images and text created in Affinity Publisher and need to send for a professional proof read. The suggestions here are all I could think of too but effectively undoes the work I have done in AP.
I think people are expecting or wanting way to much. Publisher is a page layout program, word is a word processor. IDML support is there, but not flawless. Exporting a Publisher file for Word would just be a disaster.
If your text is all linked I would just copy and paste into Word. If you need to have people proof read through word I would do all your text there, get the proofing done and then bring into Publisher. Or give them a PDF they can mark up and you make all the corrections on your end.
The easiest is it to export as pdf - everybody can read it. If one uses Acrobat DC instead of Publisher, one can as well make notes and changes and so could you merge the reult in your final file. Let me add that I am glad that word cannot do the same as publisher and vice versa.
Usually the file is send as PDF, and they can add notes on the file as said by Uwe, or better print it, add clear comments and corrections in the margins and send you the scan (our favorite, since annoted PDF is not fast and as easy and visual when you need to report corrections).
They can also copy and paste in an email or a Word document if there's few corrections. What's interesting in this is that the text structure is kept (line by line) and if they copy enough text and add corrections in red, it's easy to compare and applythe corrections at the right line.
I just discovered this export deficiency myself. First, an import of a Microsoft Word document originally created in Markdown in iA Writer and then cut and paste into Bear to get an export file with proper line breaks that iA Writer does not support, I ended up with an Affinity Publisher file with zero hyperlinks. After I tediously relinked the entire file, I know realize that that there is simply no way to export the text from Affinity Publisher in RTF or Microsoft Word with hyperlinks intact. What a cluster...k that is!
Now, I'm going to be forced to use InDesign again, even though that program is also beset by bugs. InDesign lost the footnotes of my first book and now the index of my second one. What a world we live in. How does anyone get anything done? ?
That's no substitute for being able to synchronize your work across work platforms. I plan to release my books using the Apple Pages authoring platform plus KDP, using Vellum. That requires a unified base of interchange text files, something not possible without text export with hyperlinks intact.
hat's no substitute for being able to synchronize your work across work platforms. I plan to release my books using the Apple Pages authoring platform plus KDP, using Vellum. That requires a unified base of interchange text files, something not possible without text export with hyperlinks intact.
I can see for your context that is important. For us (magazine publishers) the workflow is based on collaborative text using cloud applications. Next is the design and layout stage where pdf is output.
In that case Publisher is likely not the right tool (yet) for what you need to do.
Much like you wouldn't want to repair a watch with a Swiss Army knife, even though you might even have some success with that.
To save time I am currently using an automated AI to reply to some posts on this forum. If any of "my" posts are wrong or appear to be total b*ll*cks they are the ones generated by the AI. If correct they were probably mine. I apologise for any mistakes made by my AI - I'm sure it will improve with time.
And lets see how cloud solutions will make review processes easier. At my work the older generations are challenged by the new generation using online tools that are lighter products - for now - but the online collaboration features makes working in teams and projects with external participants possible and easy. It simply makes working easier and faster. And months of lockdown didn't slow us down one bit either. That - lockdown - by the way made changes to "proper planning" overnight.
Creative destruction will be coming (or did arrive already) to pulverize file exchanges and legacy products. Remember that state of the art weapons introduced in 1944 - 45 where outdated in 1947. Todays progress is even faster.
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