![]() ![]() This can STILL cause problems.īest Practice for Copying and Pasting into My Studies The source code ‘looks’ a bit better, but there’s still extraneous code in the sample. ![]() If you choose “Remove Formatting” when first pasting, or use the remove-formatting button in the menu And for that matter things like Chrome Books, etc will ALSO have a problem ‘reading’ this code. What an absolute mess! This will really play-havoc with the announcement when it gets sent to students through their mobile phones, or tablets. Lets click on the “Source Code” button in the editor menu and see what it looks like. Here’s what this looks like in the content editor window… Not bad right? If you choose Keep Formatting rather than removing it, the text will actually contain a large amount of ‘code’ that is invisible to you, but not to the internet. My studies (and other editors) may ask you if you wish to keep formatting or remove it. If one copies (Ctrl-C on windows or CMD-C on Mac) text directly from a Word document: Microsoft Word has a lot of built-in formatting ‘code’ contained within it, that confuses Website builders because it so closely resembles html (Hypertext Markup Language) which is the code the entire world-wide-web is built upon. I don’t need the why, just tell me how! Why? There are various tools and ways to get around this issue, and this guide will cover My Studies as an example, but the theory and practice are the same for Edublogs, and other web-content creation tools. It is not suggested to do a direct copy and paste from a Word document (.docx) file to a Web Content builder (like My Studies, Edublogs, etc). 4 Best Practice for Copying and Pasting into My StudiesĪdvice: do not copy and paste directly from Word.1 Advice: do not copy and paste directly from Word. ![]()
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