Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!rutgers!apple!agate!shelby!csli!dmr From: dmr@csli.Stanford.EDU (Daniel M. Rosenberg) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac Subject: Re: A "goody" of MS-Word... Message-ID: <9690@csli.Stanford.EDU> Date: 12 Jul 89 01:39:03 GMT References: <20200038@uxh.cso.uiuc.edu> Sender: dmr@csli.Stanford.EDU (Daniel M. Rosenberg) Organization: Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford U. Lines: 32 cuello@uxh.cso.uiuc.edu writes: >Suppose that you were typing a document in Microsoft Word 4.0. Upon a final ... >So you decide to delete those parts that should not be read by the recipient of >If the person in question has Microsoft Word 4.0, no problem; your document >will look as neat and polished as it did the last time you saved it. >But if the person has (arg!) version 3.0x, prepare yourself for a rude awake- >ning. >Because our good-old MS Word will have stored in the file _ALL_ the text that >has been typed in that document, regardless if it was deleted, edited, polished,armor-alled... >Now, isn't this an efficient way to store information? Yes, depending on which axis of effiency one travels. Microsoft Word 4.0 (and 3.0 too, I believe) can store a multi-hundreds of kilobytes document wicked fast by storing only changes onto an already present file, instead of saving the whole thing out to disk. This is really quite a neat trick. Assuming your editing isn't usually as drastic as changing, "And I'm going to shoot you Monday" to "And I'm going to have to talk to you Monday," this isn't a big deal. The workaround isn't too difficult: it's called "Save As." > Federico A. CUELLO | "Some want -- # Daniel M. Rosenberg // Stanford CSLI // Opinions are my own only. # dmr@csli.stanford.edu // decwrl!csli!dmr // dmr%csli@stanford.bitnet