You can also right-click on the individual links and select "Toggle Field Codes" to do one at a time. They're tricky to put in manually, because there's some hidden syntax or something, so you're probably better off just typing it in normally, letting Word change it automatically, and then changing your view so that you can edit the address if you need to. If you use the key combination 'Option + F9' (making sure you either have your keyboard set up to use the Function keys as normal, or using the key combination 'Option + FN + F9'), then it switches your view so you see the field code rather than the hyperlink, but you can switch right back and when someone else opens it, they should see a clickable hyperlink, since you've only changed the view option temporarily on your own machine.Ī field code for a hyperlink looks like this: In Word, hyperlinks are created with field codes, which lie editable in the background, but show a clickable link. The formula is still there, editable, in the background, but you only see the result of the formula. Essentially what it boils down to is that Word can actually translate a sort of "code" into your hyperlinks, much like Excel translates a formula into meaningful data. I looked this up in the built-in Help files on my Mac running Office 2011. I believe your solution lies in a feature called "Field Codes".
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |