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A security vulnerability exists in Microsoft Word , Bit Edition that could allow arbitrary code to run when a maliciously modified file is opened. A security vulnerability exists in Microsoft Publisher , Bit Edition that could allow arbitrary code to run when a maliciously modified file is opened. Warning: This site requires the use of scripts, which your browser does not currently allow.

See how to enable scripts. Office category page Microsoft Download Center Microsoft Premium Office apps, extra cloud storage, advanced security, and more—all in one convenient subscription For up to 6 people For 1 person. Popular Office downloads. Microsoft Office for Mac Find a plan. Personal and family Stay on top of your day with a plan for you and your family. Learn more See personal and family plans. Work Enable your employees with tools to collaborate securely and work from anywhere.

Learn more about business See business plans Learn more about enterprise See enterprise plans. Education Enable educators to unlock creativity and promote teamwork in a single, affordable solution built for education. Learn more See education plans. Powerful tools help you work, learn, organize, connect, and create. Click the "Hyperlink" button.

A dialog box labelled "Insert Hyperlink" will appear. Type the web address into the "Address" field. Click the "OK" button. To make some piece of text into a link, select the text in your document in the usual way. Drag your mouse over those words or use the Shift key together with the arrow keys to select them. Then click the "Insert" menu, followed by the "Hyperlink" item that appears in that menu. A dialog box entitled "Insert Hyperlink" should appear. Type the web address you want into the "Address" field.

If you have done it correctly, the text you selected should now be underlined and appear in blue, the way many links on the web do. Apart from inserting hyperlinks, the other thing you'll need to know is how to convert the document from its default ". To do this, if you are using Word or , click the "File" menu. If you are using Word , click the nameless round button at the top left of the Word window.

Then, whether you're using Word , or , click the "Save As" item in the menu that appears. Once the "Save As" dialog box appears, type the name of the file you want to save as in the "File name" box. For example, if you are making the main page of your website, you should call the page "index" without the quotes. Then click the "Save as type" drop down box to expand it. There are two possible options that you can use to create HTML files ie, web page files.

The "Web Page, Filtered" option creates smaller and more standard web pages that contain only the formatting code understood by web browsers and search engines. This additional code is hopefully ignored by web browsers and search engines, but is used interally by Word when you open that same file again to edit it.

If the additional code is not present, when you reopen the file in Word, you may not be able to use some of Word's features on your document in the usual way.

For example, some facilities may be disabled. In view of this, unless you know what you're doing, you probably should save it as "Web Page". It will probably also be more bloated than it needs to be. Click it. A dialog box, called "Set Page Title", will appear. This page title is the title of your web page that you see in the search engine listings of your website. It also appears in the top menu bar of the browser window when you view your web page in a web browser. It is not displayed in your document, but is an important part of a web page.

Next, if you use Word or , click the "Tools" button at the bottom of the dialog box, and select "Web Options". It's probably already selected by default in Word , but you may want to still want to check to make sure, just in case. Before you proceed, notice that Word has changed your filename to add ". For example, if you typed "index", the file will now be called "index.

Change it so that the ending is ". That is, if Word has changed it to "index. Word saves your file along with an additional folder containing any embedded pictures you have in your document as well as some other data.

You will have to publish both your file and this additional folder and its contents to your website. Since Word doesn't have a built-in facility to publish your web page, you will have to use a separate program to do this.



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