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Bonnie
April 18th 06, 01:42 PM
I have a form that I scanned and saved in Word. However, now I can do
nothing w/this form. I need to be able to type on it. How is this
accomplished? Thanks
--
Bon

Frank
April 18th 06, 01:47 PM
How to scan a document into MS Word.

http://wiki.ehow.com/Turn-a-Scanned-Document-Into-Microsoft-Word-Document
"Bonnie" > wrote in message
...
>I have a form that I scanned and saved in Word. However, now I can do
> nothing w/this form. I need to be able to type on it. How is this
> accomplished? Thanks
> --
> Bon

All Things Mopar
April 18th 06, 02:21 PM
Today =?Utf-8?B?Qm9ubmll?= commented courteously on the
subject at hand

> I have a form that I scanned and saved in Word. However,
> now I can do nothing w/this form. I need to be able to
> type on it. How is this accomplished? Thanks

You need OCR software to convert raster pixels back into text.

--
ATM, aka Jerry

"Whether You Think You CAN Or CAN'T, You're Right." – Henry Ford

Ken Blake, MVP
April 18th 06, 08:14 PM
Bonnie wrote:

> I have a form that I scanned and saved in Word. However, now I can do
> nothing w/this form. I need to be able to type on it. How is this
> accomplished? Thanks


When you scan a document, the result is a *picture* of the text, not the
text itself. It's no different from a picture of your mother; although you
can recognize your mother or read the text, the computer can't.

To turn that picture of text into actual machine-readable text you need to
use a type of software called Optical Charcter Recognition (usually
abbreviated OCR) on it. Once the OCR software has processed the file, you
can read it in Word, or any word processing software.

Scanners often come with a "Lite" version of an OCR product, but if yours
doesn't, there are several choices for sale. I personally use OmniPage, but
there are others to choose from.

--
Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User
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