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Subject:RE: Rotating an inserted Excel file in Word From:"John Fleming" <johnf -at- ecn -dot- ab -dot- ca> To:"TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com> Date:Wed, 29 Nov 2000 09:36:03 -0700
I'd like the answer too.
Last time I was faced with this challenge, I was producing a hard copy
document and used a crude workaround to create this effect. That is,
I printed the Word document with "blank pages" (headers and footers
only) where the Excel spreadsheets were supposed to be. I then stuck
the "blank pages" back in the printer and printed the spreadsheets.
That approach is cumbersome--and works *only* with hard copy
documents.
The other possible approach that's crossed my mind (though I have yet
to try it) is to set the spreadsheet up with the text running
vertically. (Format | Cells | select Alignment tab | set text
orientation using the Orientation feature). In other words, set the
spreadsheet up so a portrait orientation, when printed, will appear
as landscape.
If someone has a better approach, I am all ears.
> Subject: Rotating an inserted Excel file in Word
> From: Jean Cooper <Jean -dot- Cooper -at- twtelecom -dot- com>
> Date: Tue, 28 Nov 2000 16:36:56 -0700
> X-Message-Number: 90
> Before I state my question, let me just say that I know how to
rotate
> drawing objects and text boxes in Word. But rotating an Excel file
is
> proving to be much harder (for me).
> Here's my situation:
> I want to insert a one-page Excel file into a Word doc. The Word doc
is in
> portrait, the Excel file is in landscape (and needs to be -- if it
were in
> portrait, it wouldn't fit on the page). I'd like to insert the Excel
file
> into the Word doc and then rotate it 90 degrees so that it's in
portrait and
> can have the same headers and footers that the rest of the document
has. (Or
> I can rotate it before I insert it - it doesn't matter.) But when I
try to
> Format Object, the rotating option is always grayed out.
> I've looked in Help but it keeps trying to direct me to "rotating
drawing
> objects." And please note that I'm not referring to rotating the
text within
> the cells. I'm hoping to be able to rotate the entire Excel file 90
degrees.
> Any ideas???
> Thank you in advance!
> Jean Cooper
> P.S. I know this is easy to do in FrameMaker. Sigh.
--
John Fleming
Edmonton, Alberta
email: johnf -at- ecn -dot- ab -dot- ca
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