On Sun, 9 Dec 2012 12:52:59 +0000, Steve Rickaby <srickaby at wordmongers.demon.co.uk> wrote:
>Clearly one of the things that FrameMaker does when parsing >MIF is to spot adjacent strings like this and concatenate >them. Useful to know. Why the text came out of Word like >this is another question altogether. But with Word, who knows? Frame always merges MIF strings unless there is really something in between them. So what the pattern: <ParaLine <String `['> <String `xxxx]'> > # end of ParaLine suggests to me is that there *was* something in between, like a control char, that Frame could not represent in MIF. I'd advise that MIF wash is always the *least* you should do after using Frame's very dirty native import from Word. Actually, you are better off to copy and "paste special" as Plain Text, then redo the formatting. MIF wash will not fix all the nasties in there, which are likely to bite you again and again, and you'll have no idea why... MIF wash can be inconvenient, but it's one menu pick if you install the demo (or full) version of Mif2Go. Select a book, and it does the book file and all the chapters with one click, usually in a few seconds. The demo never expires, and works with all Frame versions from 5.5.6 to 11, and all Windows from NT 3.51 to Win 8. I use Win 7 Ultimate 64-bit myself. To download the demo, create a free account on: http://mif2go.com put something Frame-related in the bio (needed to screen out spammers; as of today, we have blocked 135 of them), then use Download | Demo Software on the left menu. Follow the five-minute install instructions on the Web page and in the User's Guide; don't try to guess at them! Enjoy! -- Jeremy H. Griffith, at Omni Systems Inc. <jeremy at omsys.com> http://mif2go.com/
