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I have about twenty MS Visio diagrams that I would like to represent in an MS Word document for delivery to users who do not have Visio. This presents two problems:

  1. It is really boring to keep the MS Word document up-to-date with changes to the Visio documents
  2. The resulting file is really big.

Does anyone have any suggestions for solving either of the above please?

Thanks,

Dave.

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It's good that you are looking for a solution to this. Right now you're just creating a lot of work for yourself and risking that the customer may get out of date information. Always better to not repeat yourself! – Brian Jul 3 at 13:57

3 Answers

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I'm removing my silly answer about using Makefiles. Word has a feature that will do this for you reasonably well.

Do this when you insert your diagrams into word (I assume you're pasting in pdfs or something, and not the raw visio) 1. Insert -> Picture -> From File 2. Choose the picture to insert 3. DON't just click the Insert button, click the dropdown and choose "Insert and Link"

Now, you can freely edit your diagrams. When it comes time to send out that word document again, open it up and do this: 1. Edit -> Links 2. Select all the images in the list of links 3. Click "Update Now"

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This works well if you are PDF'ing the document before you are sending it. If you send the raw document, then you have to send the linked files in the appropriate location as well. This used to be a huge problem since it never used relative paths for the links; to be honest, I haven't tried this in more modern versions so they may have made it actually work. – D.Shawley Jul 3 at 14:26
Actually, you don't need to send the linked files. "Insert and Link" is distinct from "Link to File" in that the file contents are immediately loaded into the document. You are then free to send it without the referenced files. – csj Jul 3 at 16:35
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You can view visio diagrams via Internet Explorer. Viewer download is necessary. If the customer would be able to get this viewer you could deliver them the raw Visio files and they'd be all set. This way you wouldn't have the problem of having to repeat yourself.

Visio Viewer

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I usually end up saving the diagrams as Enhanced Metafile (.emf)_ and then embedding the resulting image. This solves the size problem for most line drawings since metafiles are much more amenable to scaling and printing than raster formats. The downside is that you have to keep them in sync. I'd imagine that there is some method of automating this but I haven't found one if you are tied to using Word as your document format.

As a programmer, I really like editing in something like DocBook. The image source can be an HTTP endpoint so image translation is pretty easy to automate with PHP or [insert your favorite web platform here]. Since the rendering is delayed until you publish as a PDF, you don't have to worry about things getting "out of sync". The downside is that I haven't found a good way to extract individual diagrams from a Visio file in a way that is conducive to this :(

Maybe we will be really lucky and someone will write a nice whiz-bang editor or utility that generates SVG files from Visio or EMFs.

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D'oh... I guess that I should have google'd first. There are a number of EMF to SVG converters on the market. Looks like it's time to look into this solution again. – D.Shawley Jul 3 at 14:24

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