|  Writing Program  |  Business & Technical Writing  |  English Department 
|  English Tech
  |  ESL  |  Writing Program  |  All Sites... 


» Home
» Answers
» Activities


You are in Tutorials:
:: word processing ::
» Word 2003: Introduction
» Word 2003: Templates
» Word 2003: Tables
» Word 2003: Collaboration
» WordPerfect 9

:: the web ::
» Dreamweaver MX 2004
» Adobe GoLive 6
» HTML
» public_html
» Internet Explorer 6.0
» Netscape Navigator 4.7
» Netscape Navigator 7.0
» A web glossary

:: general skills ::
» Mac to PC
» Keyboard shortcuts
» Advanced Mousing
» Printer troubleshooting
» Screen resolution
» Viruses
» Freezes and Crashes
» Controlling Spam

:: lab software ::
» SSH File Transfer
» The forums
» The classpage system
» NetOp School

:: other software ::
» Photoshop 7
» Photoshop 7 - banner
» PowerPoint 2003
» Excel 2003
» Outlook Express
» RCI WebMail
» PDF reader
» PDF creation
» FlashPaper 2
» WinZip
» WinRAR

Search the GetIT website...


word 2003: collaboration

Intro & Reviewing Toolbar | Commenting | Track Changes | Merging Tracked Changes
Master Documents | Versioning

Merging Tracked Changes:
When you are working in a group in which a document is being revised and edited by several people, you may want to consolidate all the changes and comments made by others. Different reviewers will be modifying the same document. So, by merging tracked changes, you can merge all changes into the original document.

To merge track changes, you must make sure you have the original document open in Word. Then, go to the “Tools” menu and select “Compare and Merge Documents.”

Open a document that has changes in it that you wish to merge with the original document. Repeat this processes until you have merged all of the desired documents to the original documents. After you have merged all the tracked changes, you can review comments made by other people, and then accept or reject their changes.

>> next

 


Copyright © 2002
Rutgers University Writing Program
All Rights Reserved
Site Feedback & Questions?