Use AutoText, or Don'tIt's Your Choice
The Problem:
Back in the good old days of Word 2 (and the horrors of Windows 3.11 for Workgroupsno, I don't miss 'em), I used to use glossaries all the time for storing chunks of text so I could lump them quickly into my documents. Then Word 6 introduced AutoCorrect and killed glossaries stone deadfor me, anyway. But all the subsequent versions of Word still have glossaries, except that they're now called AutoText. What's the point? I can see that entries like "Page X of Y" are good for inserting fields in a header or footer. But nobody in their right mind is going to wade through three levels of menu to save typing "Dear Sir or Madam"or are they?
The Solution:
You've got a point. Most of the canned AutoText entries are practically useless. And given that AutoCorrect entries can be triggered automatically by the right sequence of letters, AutoText seems like a step backward.
AutoText has a couple of advantages over AutoCorrect, though. First, you can move AutoText entries from one template to another, while your unformatted AutoCorrect entries are stuck in a file deep within your user profile and your formatted AutoCorrect entries are locked inside Normal.dot. Second, because AutoText isn't triggered simply by your typing, you can use real words as the short versions of your AutoText entries. Consequently, they can be much easier to remember than AutoCorrect entries.
USE AUTOCORRECT MOST EFFECTIVELYAutoCorrect's "Replace text as you type" feature is great for fixing typos, but you can save much more time by creating AutoCorrect entries for text items that you need to enter frequently in your document. What these entries consist of depends on your work, but you might consider anything from creating short versions of long words (for example, "orgl" for "organizational") to creating entries for boilerplate text items of a sentence or two. Plain-text AutoCorrect entries can be up to 255 characters long, while formatted-text AutoCorrect entries can be as long as you like. Make sure that each AutoCorrect entry is not a real word in any language you use in your documents. One way of doing so is to start each AutoCorrect entry with a little-used character, such as X, Z, or J. You can also use a punctuation character to make AutoCorrect group your entries at the top or bottom of the list of entries. Make the rest of the name something easy to remember, such as an abbreviation taken from the beginning of the replacement text. One of the easiest ways to create AutoCorrect entries for your idiosyncratic typos is when spellchecking a document. Use the AutoCorrect submenu on the context menu for a single-word spellcheck or the AutoCorrect button in the Spelling and Grammar dialog box. If that doesn't work, choose Tools |
AUTOTEXT IN FOUR EASY STEPSIf you haven't worked with AutoText before, you can quickly get up to speed:
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