That's cool, but ... I have no idea what it's going to do to my existing document (especially if I don't remember what I did to the template/styles). So, it freaks me out every time I get this message because I know it could really mess things up either way I answer the question and I might not even notice subtle differences until much later when a lot of work might have been wasted.
Is there any way to see what difference answering "yes" or "no" will make (i.e. exactly what has changed) before committing to an answer?
I don't think a compare files would catch everything - like if page styles changed. If I changed left and right margins, every line would wrap differently and (probably) show up as a change, making it look like a completely different file when, really, only one or two things changed.
Related questions:
How do I tell (after the fact) what styles/template a document is based on (linked to)? I know I can open the style list in the document, but, unless I've added or deleted whole styles, the changes will be almost invisible. I'd have to modify each style one at a time and look at all the tabs and then if I had photographic memory, I might spot what has changed.
If I say no and break the links to the template/styles and then, later, change my mind, is there a way to reestablish the links?
FYI: I have a lot of programming background, but only a little familiarity with HTML and virtually none with XML. I don't mind poking around in files if I know what I'm looking for.
Thanks.
Joe
-- "My religion is very simple -- my religion is kindness." -Dalai Lama
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