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Sanely Moving from Word to the Web?

FooAtWFU asks: "I have a job for a web site (no link for you, Slashdot hordes!). A lot of it is systems administration and development, but I have to routinely post content which comes from a myriad of other sources. Usually they are from academic users, come in Word format, and ultimately need to be posted in HTML. The problem is that Word has all sorts of tricks up its sleeve to throw off the font, layout, size, and so forth. To achieve any sort of visual consistency on the site these various formatting tags all need to be scrubbed, but even using other office suites with better HTML export (OpenOffice.Org) to do the dirty work, it's often easier to recreate the formatting by hand from a plain-text version than it is to clean up a sea of messy tags. Does anyone have any advice (or magical tools) to help me deal with this sort of tedious cleanup?"

6 of 547 comments (clear)

  1. Dreamweaver by necro2607 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I would suggest using Macromedia Dreamweaver... it's what we use where I work and essentially all of our content entry involves pasting in content from Word documents supplied by clients. Dreamweaver is pretty good for formatting and working with stylesheets.

    1. Re:Dreamweaver by fean · · Score: 5, Informative

      in Dreamweaver, there's a command "Clean up MS Word HTML". Its made to clean up Word's crappy html, and does a pretty nice job of it.

    2. Re:Dreamweaver by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Also note that you have the ability to cut and paste formatted text from Word into the 'Design View' within dreamweaver and DW will automatically reformat the incoming text appropriately. In my brief test to make sure i wasnt talking out my a** i found it even supports word tables properly.
      If you paste text into the Code view, DW removes the formatting completely and just uses the raw text.

  2. HTML Tidy by N8F8 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Save the Word document as filtered HTML and pipe the HTML through HTML Tidy. Nice clean HTML.

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
  3. no link for you, Slashdot hordes! by SeanTobin · · Score: 5, Informative

    Hmmm... sounds like a challenge to me. Let's see what we can dig up.

    Step 1: Let's look at his user page

    Ahh! He put in a website with his profile. Let's all go and check out http://fennec.homedns.org/

    Hmm... looks like a personal page. Not too sure what to make of the comic. Anyway, let's move on to..

    Step 2: Let's look at his author page. Some interesting stuff here, including three separate e-mail addresses (which I won't post here. You're welcome :)

    A-ha! There is a link to his employer! It's Economic History Services. And what do you know... there are a significant number of pages (especially under abstracts and book reviews) that seem to come straight out of a word processor, only with extensive cleaning. A quick look at the source reveals something interesting. It's clean. Very clean. We're talking on the level of I-use-vim-for-my-webpage-editor clean. Nice job.

    Anyway, it looks like it was done by hand. I'm not saying its not good work (quite to the contrary), but I can see your need for an automated solution.

    --
    Karma: SELECT `karma` FROM `users` WHERE `userid`=138474;
  4. Tidy Flags by N8F8 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Almost forgot. The Tidy Docs will tell you to select "--bare" and "--word-2000" and I also recommend "--output-xhtml" and "--indent".

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power