Keeping a hyperlink fresh

  • Thread starter Thread starter Hari
  • Start date Start date
H

Hari

Hi,

I have created a hyperlink in word. Once I click on that hyperlink then the
hyperlink loses its freshness ( that is it no longer has the blue color
which it has before clicking on it.) Is there any way to always keep it
fresh ( I mean my hyperlink works each time I click on it as expect it to,
only thing is it will not appear blue after the first time.)

Regards,
Hari
India
 
Remove the Hyperlink character style and apply a new character style defined
as blue and underlined.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA

Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so
all may benefit.
 
Hi Suzanne,

Relatively a novice in word. (I work on excel primarily).

What does "Removing Hyperlink character style" and "apply a new character
style" mean.

If possible guide me on how to go about this.

Regards,
Hari
India
 
You can remove the Hyperlink style by selecting the hyperlink and pressing
Ctrl+Spacebar. You could then apply direct font formatting (while the
hyperlink is still selected, go to Format Font and select Font Color: Blue
and a single underline). These attributes can also be applied using toolbar
buttons or (in the case of the underline) keyboard shortcuts. If you want to
be able to apply the blue+underline formatting to text in a single stroke,
you can create a character style and assign it to a keyboard shortcut. To
create a new character style, go to Format | Style and click New. Select
Character as the style type. If your formatted hyperlink is still selected,
the formatting will already be defined; just give your style a name, click
OK, then Apply.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA

Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so
all may benefit.
 
This brings up a tricky issue with hyperlink formatting. I have had
documents in Word in which the hyperlink style had been changed to dark
blue. But when these documents were made into a web page, some of the
hyperlinks in the web page appeared as red or maroon color, while others
retained their dark blue color.

I imagine this has something to do with the fact that some of the
hyperlinks had been travelled, and others not. But since they were the
same color in the Word document, why did they take on different colors
when posted in a Web page?

Larry
 
There are character styles for Hyperlink and Followed Hyperlink, which were
perhaps set to be the same thing in the Word doc, but not in the Web page,
which presumably has its own stylesheet?

An alternate method for the original poster, I imagine, would have been to
set those two styles to be identical, instead of a new personal hyperlink
style.

DM
 
In other words, the hyperlink keeps its attribute of being followed or
not followed, regardless of what the style for a followed or not
followed hyperlink is. So when those hyperlinks are pasted into some
other application, like a web page, the web page picks up on each
hyperlink's type and makes it that color.

That's a drag, because then there's no way that you can assure that the
hyperlinks will be a uniform color in the web page. Is there some way
that all followed hyperlinks can be made into pristine hyperlinks, or
vice versa?

Larry
 
In other words, the hyperlink keeps its attribute of being followed or
not followed, regardless of what the style for a followed or not
followed hyperlink is. So when those hyperlinks are pasted into some
other application, like a web page, the web page picks up on each
hyperlink's type and makes it that color.

That's a drag, because then there's no way that you can assure that the
hyperlinks will be a uniform color in the web page. Is there some way
that all followed hyperlinks can be made into pristine hyperlinks, or
vice versa?

Larry

Greetings--
You need to link your Web page to a Cascading Style Sheet (CSS)

Here are the "pseudo-class" codes to use for hyperlinks:

a:link {
color: blue;
text-decoration: none;
}
a:visited {
color: blue;
text-decoration: none;
}
a:hover {
color: red;
text-decoration: none;
}
a:active {
color: red;
text-decoration: none;
}

Of course you can change the colours.
 
Click on them all before doing anything with the doc?

Find and Replace the character style before uploading?

I'm still getting my head around the idea of Word re-applying a style just
because I clicked on a link, but I assume those two methods above should
work.

DM
 
The display of Hyperlink or Followed Hyperlink is localized. So if you're
putting up a Web site, each viewer is going to see the Hyperlink or Followed
Hyperlink color depending on whether or not that specific user has
(recently) been to that URL. You can, in designing the Web page, define the
Hyperlink and Followed Hyperlink styles to use the same color, but some
users have their browser settings such that they will override any choices
you have made in designing the page.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA

Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so
all may benefit.
 
The issues here get complicated and I'm still working my head around
them. But one thing is, I'm not even talking here about my own website.
I have sent Word documents to be published at web sites, and even though
the hyperlinks in the document I sent had a uniform color, when the
article was published at the website the links had two different colors.
It's not my web site so I have no control over their style sheets,
formatting, etc. So I need to do something to the hyperlinks in my
document before I send it to them. But (and here's the catch again),
because the hyperlinks in my Word document are of one color, I have no
way of knowing what is or isn't a "followed" hyperlink, and, even if I
did, what I could do to make the final color at the website uniform.
It's a weird issue.

Another puzzle I've found in looking into this. Even though a hyperlink
link in a Word document will change from, say, blue to red when it's
followed, thus conforming to the Followed Hyperlink style, the actual
hyperlink link does not have the Followed Hyperlink style. It still has
the Hyperlink style. In other words, it takes on the formatting
attributes of the Followed Hyperlink style, but its registered style is
still Hyperlink, not Followed Hyperlink.

Larry
 
I think you can assume that other users who look at your document online
will see all the hyperlinks in Hyperlink style until they have clicked on
them, at which point they will take on the Followed Hyperlink style. I would
stop fretting about it if I were you. This is the way the Web works.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA

Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so
all may benefit.
 
I'm pretty sure someone told me he saw the hyperlinks of a posted
document of mine as being inconsistent in their colors--so it wasn't
just me at my computer who saw it that way. I'm double checking with
him now to make sure that this was the case.

Larry
 
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