Hi Judy,
I tried this but I can’t get it to work.
Starting with the first step, if I open find and replace to a non-italic
character in the file, I’m not presented with “italic on” as an option. So I
moved to a known italic page number, parked the cursor there, and followed the
steps but got “no results found.” Perhaps something has changed in the most
recent version of MS Word.
I’ll continue manually changing these page numbers unless you come back with a
new idea. Of course I could be doing something incorrect.
I assume the open and close brace characters are intended. These are unusual.
I pasted your steps in rather than typing them. I did not search for any
particular page number.
From: bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
On Behalf Of Judy s.
Sent: Monday, November 14, 2022 7:04 PM
To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: Italic page numbers
Hi Terry,
I hope it works well for you. Visual Basic is a full programming language, and
truly is quite powerful. Word incorporates a slightly nonstandard version of
Visual Basic inside of it.The macros you use in Word are based on that Visual
Basic, as sort of preprogrammed modules you can create without having to do any
coding per se.
The little code for changing the italics breaks down like this:
The (0-9) means "for any digit from zero to 9" and the {1,3} says "for every
number that is from 1 to three digits in length, or in other words every number
from 0 to 999. Adding the ^13 makes it only look for numbers that are the last
set of characters in a paragraph.
Done this way, it correctly grabs numbers like 222 or 987, and not just the
individual digits that make up the number.
If you have a sentence that ends a paragraph that ends in a number, it will
find that, which is why you can't use this as a global find and replace. That
can happen especially in nonfiction books that have dates at the end of a
paragraph, like November 14, 2022, but only if the date isn't followed by any
punctuation.
Because it is so cryptic, it is really easy to make mistakes via typos that can
do some crazy things! smile.
Judy
On 11/14/2022 6:30 PM, t.gorman (t.gorman) wrote:
Judy,
Thanks for this. I’ll try it out on a copy and see what happens. I never
learned this kind of programming. Looks powerful!
From: bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
<mailto:bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
<bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of Judy s.
Sent: Monday, November 14, 2022 6:22 PM
To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: Italic page numbers
Hi Terry,
Here's the wildcard search that should help you find and replace italicized
page numbers. Let me know if it does anything screwy or doesn't work the way
you expect it to.
How To Replace any italicized page number from 1 to 3 digits in length with the
same number, making sure it is not italicized:
In the following example, the page numbers are always followed by a hard
paragraph mark, which they ordinarily would be in a scan for Bookshare. When
you use a wildcard search, however, you can't use ^p as that is interpreted as
something else by visual basic. Instead, use ^13 as that is the paragraph mark
visual basic recognizes.
1. In the "find and replace" box for Word, turn on italicization by placing
your cursor in the "find what" field and type a ctrl-i. This will set the font
characteristic to italicization on.
2. In the find field then type in:
([0-9]{1,3})^13
3. Tab to the "replace with" field. Turn off italicization by placing your
cursor in the box and then typing ctrl-i and then typing ctrl-i again. This
will set the font characteristic to italicization off.
4. In the replace with field type in:
\1^13
5. In the "more" drop down box select "Use Wildcards"
Now search for each instance. Do not do a global replace!! It will mess with
every italicized number in the document if you do that.
When you are done fixing all of your page numbers, make sure to turn off the
"use wildcards" in the "more" drop down box or all of a sudden it will seem
like none of your searches are finding anything.
I don't use Word to proofread anymore, as I proofread using Google Docs on an
Android device, but if there are other repetitive weirdnesses in Word I may be
able to help with wildcard type searches from what I used to do.
--
Judy s.
Follow me on Twitter at QuackersNCheese
On 11/14/2022 4:30 PM, t.gorman (t.gorman) wrote:
Hi Judy,
I’d be interested in that wild card if you find it.
I have some Word macros of my own. If somebody wants them and can tell me how
to share them I could do that.
One converts footnote numbers which I number with asterisks to account for them
and check them for accuracy to superscripts without the asterisk as required by
the manual. Some of the Oxford University books have up to 1600 footnotes so
this macro, even though I have to press it once for each footnote, still
reduces the number of operations tremendously.
Another macro takes a scanned index which usually runs on without proper
linebreaks to have mostly proper linebreaks. You still have to read the index
but it’s mostly fixed in that one regard.
A third macro takes a title which I’ve preceded with a number sign and changes
its attributes to bold and 16 point. I don’t have one for subentries at 14 and
bold so have to do those manually. I should make one for that but I’m too
computer phobic to do it.
While one can do these things manually as you go through the book I prefer to
have this process which I do at the end. It’s more accurate than if I expect my
brain to jump from one thing to another as I’m working on the book.
Does anyone else have macros you’d like to tell us about?
I bet there are some internally within Bookshare to make the work easier.
I’ve thought of making one to do some other automated operations but global
replacements are risky.
I use qz to mark my place in a book. I was quite surprised recently when I
encountered a web site with the URL qz.com.
I use qq to mark things I want a sighted volunteer to check with me. That
letter combinations I found is used in some Arab languages.
Well, life and proofing are both interesting!
From: bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
<mailto:bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
<bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of Judy
Sent: Monday, November 14, 2022 3:23 PM
To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Italic page numbers
Hi Terry,
I'm pretty sure, but not 100 percent positive, that the Bookshare converter
changes italicized page numbers to ordinary. However, I think it's best to ask
Amanda this one.
If it doesn't, I have a Word wildcard search around somewhere in my archive of
Bookshare proofreading notes that I can look for that makes it easier to do
this.
Judy
--
Judy s.
Follow me on Twitter at QuackersNCheese <https://twitter.com/QuackersNCheese>
--
Judy s.
Follow me on Twitter at QuackersNCheese <https://twitter.com/QuackersNCheese>