
Tips.Net > WordTips Home > Graphics > Hiding Graphics
Summary: Do you need a printout where graphics can be turned on and off? This tip provides some concrete ways you can get just want you need in such a printout. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, Word 2003, and Word 2007.)
If you are preparing documents that contain graphics, you may want to print the graphics on one version of the document, but not print them on another. For example, you might be preparing a test for students, and the test requires them to draw a graph. You would want the printout of the student version of the test to leave space for drawing a graph, but the printout of the answer sheet should include the graphic showing how the students should answer.
There are many ways you can go about approaching this task. One method is to create two versions of the same document—one with the answers and one without. This approach takes quite a bit of "synchronizing" to make sure it works, however. If you forget to make a change in both documents, they can quickly get out of sync.
To overcome this problem you will want to create a single file that contains the answers. Assuming the answers are graphic files, the easiest way is to print the student version using draft mode. Follow these steps if you are using a version of Word prior to Word 2007:
If you are using Word 2007, you can print a draft version in this manner:
Word prints the document very quickly, leaving blank space where graphics would normally appear. Obviously this is an either/or situation: either you print the graphics or you don't. If you have some graphics you want to appear in the document, and others you don't, this solution will not work.
In this instance (some graphics need to print, others don't) you will need to resort to individual formatting of the graphics you don't want to print on the student version. One approach is to select the graphic and adjust its brightness to its highest level. This "washes out" the graphic to the point that it appears completely white when printed.
Another approach is to use hidden text. The Hidden attribute can be applied to both graphics and text, which means you can use hidden text for all your answers. If you print with hidden text turned on, then you are creating an answer sheet; with it turned off you are printing a student test.
To work with the hidden text method, follow these steps if you are using a version of Word prior to Word 2007:
The steps are slightly different if you are using Word 2007:
There is one thing you may need to do when using this approach. If the student test is "collapsed" (meaning there is no room left for them to draw their answers), you may need to play with the line spacing for each question. You can do this by using the Paragraph option from the Format menu for each question. (In Word 2007 you would use the options in the Paragraph group on the Home tab of the ruler.) This may, of course, take a bit of trial and error to get the desired effect.
Yet another option you can use is to take advantage of an intrinsic difference in how Word handles inline graphics as opposed to floating graphics. Say you had two graphics files—one for the student test and the other for the answer sheet. Put your test document together by following these guidelines:
When you are ready to print your tests, use the following steps for Word 97 through Word 2003:
To print your tests using Word 2007, follow these steps:
The setting of the Drawing Objects check box or the Print Drawings Created in Word check box controls, essentially, whether floating graphics are printed or not. These types of graphics are inserted not in the midst of your text, but "over" your text, on what Microsoft calls the drawing layer. Thus, when the check box is cleared, the drawing layer is ignored in the printout.
Tip #1811 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 2000 2002 2003 2007
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