ID: Q194213
The information in this article applies to:
When you open a document in FrontPage Editor that was created in Microsoft Word, the format of the converted text does not changed when you apply heading style formatting to the text.
The default font in Microsoft Word for Windows 95 version 7.0 is 10-point Times New Roman. When a you format a Word document in a font other than the default font (for example, 12-point Times New Roman), and convert the file to HTML, the HTML converter encloses the text in the <font>[ASCII 133]</font> tags, like this:
<font face=Arial size=10>text</font>
If you then open the file in FrontPage Editor and apply a Heading 1 style,
FrontPage encloses the text in the <H1>[ASCII 133]</H1> tags, like this
<H1><font face=Arial size=10>text</font></H1>
causing the font tags to be nested inside the heading tags. When this
happens, the heading tags will be ignored.
If you want to apply a style to a converted Word document, follow these steps:
1. Select the text.
2. From the Change Style list on the Formatting toolbar, click Normal.
3. On the Format menu, click Font. From the Font box in the Font dialog
box, select the font you want to use and then click OK.
When the Microsoft Word to HTML converter translates a Microsoft Word document to HTML, the font tags are added to each paragraph so that the Word document will look the same in a browser as it does in the Word program.
For information about the HTML markup language, see the HTML specification at the following World Wide Web site:
http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/
Additional query words: fp98 word
Version : WINDOWS:98
Platform : WINDOWS
Hardware : x86
Issue type : kbprb
Last Reviewed: July 1, 1999