Hi Richard, Thanks for the info... Right, LOR... that's what I was thinking when I typed LOF... I hadn't thought of using the LOR that way before, but it's a good idea.
In my initial look, I found some graphics that appeared to have been made with the graphic tools, but I don't think those would be OLEs... perhaps they were made elsewhere and copied into the doc. I'll keep investigating. Thanks, Don Combs, Richard wrote: > Donald M Rinderknecht wrote: > > >> I'm using FM 8 for this file... forgot to mention that, but the Edit > >> Links doesn't show anything. >> In looking at the MIF I see it though: >> >> >>> ... >>> <ImportObject >>> <Unique 1152431> >>> <Fill 7> >>> <PenWidth 1.0 pt> >>> <Separation 0> >>> <ObColor `Black'> >>> =OLE2 >>> &%v >>> &\xD0CF11E0A1B11AE100000000... >>> >> Don't see anything in the doc... body or ref pages. >> >> Would it show in a LOF? >> > > FM 9 or 8 has nothing to do with it. In 7.2, if I import an OLE object linked > to file and select Edit > Links, it's listed. If the Links dialog doesn't > show anything, that means whoever imported the OLE objects simply embedded > them in the doc instead of linking to a file. A really, really bad idea, > IMHO. > > LOF won't help -- you simply define which paragraphs it includes. What can > help is a List of References. Select Imported Graphics to include. Then use > the LOR as a graphic eliminator as you page through the book. When you get to > a graphic that's not listed in the LOR, it's either an embedded graphic or an > OLE object. > > HTH! > > Richard G. Combs > Senior Technical Writer > Polycom, Inc. > richardDOTcombs AT polycomDOTcom > 303-223-5111 > ------ > rgcombs AT gmailDOTcom > 303-903-6372 > ------ > > > > > > -- Don Rinderknecht -- 405.325.2805 (Office) Meteorologist Instructor/Developer Warning Decision Training Branch, Norman, OK, http://www.wdtb.noaa.gov (This message was sent from my laptop... I could be anywhere...) ---------------- "I'm lookin' at a tin star with a drunk pinned on it." - Cole Thornton (John Wayne), El Dorado (1967)
