From: Colleen M on
I have a resume template that contains a frame on the first page. When trying
to apply a style to the text within the frame, the text within the frame
loses its positioning, i.e. it can end up anywhere on the page, or the whole
text within the frame ends up jumbled. (The style I'm trying to apply does
have the frame defined). The frame is defined with a left side vertical
border.

By recreating the template from scratch, I thought I had gotten rid of the
problem, but if I copy and paste that frame into another document, the
problem reappears.

I don't know if this all makes any sense, but I'm wondering if there's
something in the way I've defined the style, or ... ??? Anyone have any clues?
--
Colleen
From: Doug Robbins - Word MVP on
What is the purpose of the Frame?

--
Hope this helps.

Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my
services on a paid consulting basis.

Doug Robbins - Word MVP, originally posted via msnews.microsoft.com

"Colleen M" <ColleenM(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:1671363F-C8A0-4873-B608-82E5ED3FCA2F(a)microsoft.com...
> I have a resume template that contains a frame on the first page. When
> trying
> to apply a style to the text within the frame, the text within the frame
> loses its positioning, i.e. it can end up anywhere on the page, or the
> whole
> text within the frame ends up jumbled. (The style I'm trying to apply does
> have the frame defined). The frame is defined with a left side vertical
> border.
>
> By recreating the template from scratch, I thought I had gotten rid of the
> problem, but if I copy and paste that frame into another document, the
> problem reappears.
>
> I don't know if this all makes any sense, but I'm wondering if there's
> something in the way I've defined the style, or ... ??? Anyone have any
> clues?
> --
> Colleen