|   
			ESL Forum: 
			
			
			
			Techniques and methods 
			in Language Teaching 
			
			Games, activities 
			and teaching ideas 
			
			Grammar and 
			Linguistics 
			
			
			Teaching material 
			
			
			Concerning 
			worksheets 
			
			
			Concerning 
			powerpoints 
			
			
			Concerning online 
			exercises 
			
			
			Make suggestions, 
			report errors 
			
			
			Ask for help 
			
			
			
			Message board 
			  
			
			
			
			
			 | 
 		
		
		ESL forum >
		
		
		Concerning worksheets > GIFF pictures in Word are heavier??? How to resize?     
			
		 GIFF pictures in Word are heavier??? How to resize? 
		
			| 
				
					| 
					
					
 
 moravc
 
   | 
						
							| GIFF pictures in Word are heavier??? How to resize? 
 |  
							| Dear friends, I have a strange problem: small giffs inserted to a table in Word became extremely heavy!
 I used 15 giffs (15 kB-30 kB), but the Word document is suddenly 2,6 MB.
 
 I have tried to format picture - compress - web-96dpi.
 I have tried software NXPower.
 
 What am I doing wrong? (Word 2002)
 Is my Word ok? Is it normal - after inserting a picture, the document size grows rapidly? How can it be - 200kB pictures after inserting 2MB document???
 
 Please help me, I have been trying to solve it for 2 hours... nothing helps...
 
  
 |  3 Feb 2009      
					
					 |  |  
			| 
 
					
					
					
				 
 |  
			|  |  
			| 
				
					| 
					
					
 
 nikita2008
 
   | 
						
							| WELL DONE!!!   I�ll try that next time!!  |  3 Feb 2009     
					
                     |  |  
			| 
				
					| 
					
					
 
 freddie
 
   | 
						
							| i`ve heard somewhere that works! When I have that problem, I`ll try that! Thanks for the lesson! |  3 Feb 2009     
					
                     |  |  
			| 
				
					| 
					
					
 
 alien boy
 
   | 
						
							| I posted a comment SOMEWHERE in one of the discussions about this... but here it is again about Word documents... 
 If you (heavily) edit a Word document that contains graphics Word will actually (generally) keep a lot of extra information that tracks all the changes that have gone on to make sure the correct images show up (I can provide a more technical description if anyone wants it).
 
 By copying your edited worksheet & pasting it into a new document you essentially start THAT document with a �clean sheet� so there is less stuff for Word to track changes in.
 
 That�s pretty much why the �cut & paste� thing may (but not always) reduce the size of a document.
 
 Cheers
 
 |  4 Feb 2009     
					
                     |  |  
	
	   |