breaking a big document into chunks
breaking a big document into chunks
I'm been writing a long document (300+ pages), with footnotes, in chunks (about 7 separate pieces). I'm maybe a third of the way there.
What is this the best approach for speed and stability? The current approach means I will have to cut, paste, and stitch the parts together, so footnotes will have to renumber, etc. etc. I've wondered if that's inviting problems, but I figured it was better than working with such a large (and growing) document all aloong.
Or is working with the document as one large file, from the start, the best?
Or, should I try to keep the chapters permanently separate, and have footnotes manually start at the appropriate numbers? Which sounds like a headache!
Unsure which is the best strategy, and I appreciate your wisdom.
--Kevin
What is this the best approach for speed and stability? The current approach means I will have to cut, paste, and stitch the parts together, so footnotes will have to renumber, etc. etc. I've wondered if that's inviting problems, but I figured it was better than working with such a large (and growing) document all aloong.
Or is working with the document as one large file, from the start, the best?
Or, should I try to keep the chapters permanently separate, and have footnotes manually start at the appropriate numbers? Which sounds like a headache!
Unsure which is the best strategy, and I appreciate your wisdom.
--Kevin
Hi, Kevin.
Like you, many times I happen to work in chunks. That's because frequently I get a file for each single chapter, or so. Then I assemble them by dragging the file icons in due order (chapter one, chapter two, and so on). No trouble so far. Notes are rearranged OK, that is they flow uninterruptedly unless you choose to restart numbering for each section (in a multi-section document).
Clearly a single-file approach, when possible, would be the best way, in my opinion. Even though it looks bulky and heavy.
Cheers. Henry.
Like you, many times I happen to work in chunks. That's because frequently I get a file for each single chapter, or so. Then I assemble them by dragging the file icons in due order (chapter one, chapter two, and so on). No trouble so far. Notes are rearranged OK, that is they flow uninterruptedly unless you choose to restart numbering for each section (in a multi-section document).
Clearly a single-file approach, when possible, would be the best way, in my opinion. Even though it looks bulky and heavy.
Cheers. Henry.
Groucho
drag versus copy/paste?
Hmm, what do you mean by dragging the icons? I would have done a select all/copy/paste into the new document. Perhaps you know something clever (or obvious), that I don't.
Glad the system works, though!
Kevin
Glad the system works, though!
Kevin
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Largest number of pages for a NWP file.
I have several large files, over 100 pages, and I'm using 10.4.11 on a twin 867 G4. This is more or less the minimum configuration for Leopard.jennydiski wrote:What would be the largest sized file (number of pages) that wouldn't cause performance problems?
My largest file is close to 500 pages. This takes over a minute to open. Typing is fine most of the time, and Find/Replace invariably works very speedily

Another file is over 200 pages and suffers far less such problems. If it were a viable option, I would chunk down the 500 page file. I could break the 200 page down, and haven't yet done so. So I guess my answer is that 200 pages is the maximum viable file size for the outstanding NWPro 1.0.3 on my machine.