Microsoft Word template

From Just Solve the File Format Problem
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 5: Line 5:
 
}}
 
}}
  
'''MS Word Dot''' format is variant of the [[DOC]] format used in (pre-2007 versions of) Microsoft Word. It is nearly identical to the DOC format, but causes Word to treat it as a template rather than a standalone document, meaning that when you open it, make changes, and save it, it will not automatically save on top of the original file, but will prompt for a new filename to save to, in DOC format by default (though you can use other "Save-As" options to save as different things including DOT). The purpose is to save formatting templates to use as starting points for creating documents; for instance, you may have a template for business letters. In Word 2007 and later, [[DOTX]] is used instead, as the template version of the [[DOCX]] format. (Also, [[DOTM]] is a variant of DOTX supporting templates.)
+
'''MS Word Dot''' format is variant of the [[DOC]] format used in (pre-2007 versions of) Microsoft Word. It is nearly identical to the DOC format, but causes Word to treat it as a template rather than a standalone document, meaning that when you open it, make changes, and save it, it will not automatically save on top of the original file, but will prompt for a new filename to save to, in DOC format by default (though you can use other "Save-As" options to save as different things including DOT). The purpose is to save formatting templates to use as starting points for creating documents; for instance, you may have a template for business letters. In Word 2007 and later, [[DOTX]] is used instead, as the template version of the [[DOCX]] format. (Also, [[DOTM]] is a variant of DOTX supporting macros.)
  
 
== Sample files ==
 
== Sample files ==

Revision as of 02:31, 19 April 2014

File Format
Name Microsoft Word template
Ontology
Extension(s) .dot

MS Word Dot format is variant of the DOC format used in (pre-2007 versions of) Microsoft Word. It is nearly identical to the DOC format, but causes Word to treat it as a template rather than a standalone document, meaning that when you open it, make changes, and save it, it will not automatically save on top of the original file, but will prompt for a new filename to save to, in DOC format by default (though you can use other "Save-As" options to save as different things including DOT). The purpose is to save formatting templates to use as starting points for creating documents; for instance, you may have a template for business letters. In Word 2007 and later, DOTX is used instead, as the template version of the DOCX format. (Also, DOTM is a variant of DOTX supporting macros.)

Sample files

Software and Program Code

Other links

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox