The WinZip technique only works for the new Microsoft Word formats (.docx, 
.docm, .dotx rather than .doc and .dot) that were introduced in Office 2007 and 
continued in Office 2010. These file formats all contain a collection of XML 
text files and graphics objects that have been zipped into a single wrapper. 

Word 2003 was still the era of the monolithic binary file format and Word 2003 
files *cannot* be opened with WinZip regardless of the filename extension. If 
you open a Word 2003 .doc file in Word 2007 or Word 2010 it will initially keep 
the file in "compatibility mode", which is not the zip-type file. Even if you 
specifically save it in Word 2007 .docx format , it will not necessarily handle 
the graphics the same was as if it were a native Word 2007 file. All of which 
leaves you with the other two methods of extracting graphics if you are 
starting with a Word 2003 or older file. 

-Fred Ridder



Date: Mon, 28 Mar 2011 17:02:31 -0700
From: mkrupp...@yahoo.com
Subject: RE: Extracting art from Word docs
To: framers at lists.frameusers.com; docudoc at hotmail.com






Thanks for the good advice, Fred!

I'm with you on all but the last point. Unfortunately, this is one of those 
legacy docs that has a long and checkered history. It was originally done in 
PageMaker 6.5, and it was only through a series of gyrations and extractions 
that I got a Word doc at all. No source art files, nobody left to tell the tale!

I tried changing the extension, but I have only Word 2003 at work, and WinZip 
wouldn't buy it. Will have to try it at home with a more recent version, but I 
do see your point. Will try more maneuvers tomorrow.

This list is such a great resource! You've saved me enormous amounts of work so 
many times!

Thanks again,
Marguerite


--- On Mon, 3/28/11, Fred Ridder <docudoc at hotmail.com> wrote:


From: Fred Ridder <docu...@hotmail.com>
Subject: RE: Extracting art from Word docs
To: mkrupp128 at yahoo.com, framers at lists.frameusers.com
Date: Monday, March 28, 2011, 6:03 PM




Marguerite Krupp wrote:

>Does the technique of changing the file extension to .zip require 
>that the graphics be imported by reference, so they exist as separate 
>files when unpacked?

First, note that it is *not* necessary to change the filename extension. All 
that is necessary is to open it with a tool like WinZip that looks past the 
extension to see what's inside the file itself. 

Second, the word/media folder you will find inside the Word file will contain a 
graphic object for every graphic in the document whether it was pasted, 
inserted by reference, or embedded as an editable object. Graphics that are in 
a vector format (WMF, Visio objects, etc.) are in the word/media folder as .emf 
or .wmf objects, and raster graphics seem to be in .png format. I was just 
working on a document that had a mixture of pasted vector figures, pasted 
raster images, and embedded Visio drawing objects, and all of them were present 
in the word/media folder.

Third, if the graphics were imported by reference you'd already have spearate 
external files for each one, so there seems to be little point in extracting 
another copy from the Word document.

-Fred Ridder  

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