Beauregard T. Shagnasty wrote:
Daniel wrote:

Does anyone know how well MS Word might compose an HTML file, or, to put
it another way, how clean is a HTML file written in MS Word??

Back in the day, MS Word was always listed as a terrible web page
generator, coming in behind only MS Publisher and MS Excel for the honors
of "worst possible tool." I doubt it has improved. All those MS products
fill the HTML with bloated proprietary junk so they can "restore" the
document to their native format.

In other words, use something else.


Still is.

One of the effects of this is that if you copy content from something produced in Word, and paste into anything else that supports HTML content, then you get all the useless Microsoft HTML code (including unused style and font definitions) in the target document.

This is especially noticeable if somebody copies content from a Word document into an email message that has HTML formatting enabled. I've seen one paragraph messages that are nearly 20K.

Microsoft's intent is that you can use Word as web content editor, publish to the web, and then be able to copy from the web and edit again in Word with no loss of fidelity or content. It's one of the things that works reasonably well in a Microsoft-centric corporate environment (including Microsoft servers and users using Internet Explorer -- e.g., a corporate Intranet), but is considerably less effective for the general public, especially when a lot of the tools used don't have a Microsoft logo in the startup splash screen.

Smith

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