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A Handy Tool for Writers

A Session with Earl Javorsky


Besides writing, I work as an editor and proofreader. When I get back a copyedited work, I am then tasked with—assuming it’s a Word doc with Tracking turned on—Accepting or Rejecting edits, which I can see in a Reviewing Pane and address one at a time, either right-clicking or going up to the ribbon in the Review tab at the top. Similarly, when I send out work I’ve edited, the writer has to respond to my suggestions.


Most of the time, the edits are things like comma insertions or deletions, hyphens, misspelled words, etc., and it’s laborious to catch them one at a time. It’s far easier to scan a section (a paragraph or two), Reject any changes I don’t agree with (usually the exception), then Select the section and, using an easy-to-create Macro , Accept all the changes in the paragraph.


In the accompanying video, I start with a page from Trust Me, a novel of mine, to which I added mistakes and then edited after turning Track Changes on. Then, using the custom Macro, I Accept them globally (within the selected section). In the next section, I find a change I disagree with, so I Reject it; then I repeat the global Accept (only within the section) using the Macro.


Creating the Macro is a breeze. Start a new Word doc and select the Review tab in the Word ribbon up top. Click on Track Changes and then type “xxx” and double-click to highlight it. Choose the Developer  tab in the ribbon at the top and click on Record Macro on the upper left. Give your Macro a name and description (optional) and select Keyboard. In the next screen, where it says Press new shortcut key, choose a pair that is unlikely to interfere with anything already preset in your system—I use Alt+a—and then press Assign. The window will disappear and you’ll be in your Word doc with a cursor that looks like a cassette tape. Now go back to the Review tab and click the arrow under Accept and select Accept Change. Finally, go back to the Developer  tab and select Stop Recording. You now have a handy Macro to greatly simplify the post-copyedit or post-proofing revision process (Comments will not be affected.)


I used to tell clients the easiest way to deal with line edits is to Reject the ones you don’t agree with and then globally Accept what’s left. However, globally altering a document is risky. Using this Macro allows you to deal with manageable chunks at a time.

Check the video to see how easy the cleanup process becomes!


I hope you find this useful!



 

About the Author…

Dan Fante, author ofPoint Doom, calls Earl Javorsky “the real deal,” and it’s easy to tell why as soon as you open an Earl Javorsky book. The voice is crisp, the characters are distinctive, and the story draws you in instantly. We think Earl is one of the most distinctive new suspense writers to come around in some time. 

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