AboutSuzanne S. Barnhill Expertise I've been using Word for Windows since version 2.0 (1992), and the more I learn
about it, the more I realize how little I know. But I may know a few things
that you don't, and I'll help if I can. I answer many questions every day in
Microsoft's peer support newsgroups and as a result have been awarded the
MVP (Most Valuable Professional) designation by Microsoft Corporation. You
may be able to find the answer to your question at the Word MVPs' FAQ site or at my own Word FAQ site, so please check those first! Please, no questions about VBA (macros), Registry editing, networks, or complex merges, as I have no experience with these aspects of Word, nor do I have any experience with Word for the Mac.
Experience I have a master's degree in classics (Latin), which is surprisingly helpful, though I no longer teach. The things I am proudest of: Having raised two children to maturity, both Merit Scholars, both college graduates (one a philosophy major!), one Phi Beta Kappa (from Harvard!); having been made a Paul Harris Fellow by my Rotary club; having been designated a Microsoft MVP.
Education/Credentials B.A. (Latin), Agnes Scott College, 1966; M.A. (Classics), Emory University, 1972.
Question I'm sorry... I found the option to find and replace all fields, so that's okay now. And I'm manually doing the rest, only instead of copy and paste, I saved a copy of the file and am deleting everything I don't want to keep. It would help if I could search and replace on all tables (replace with nothing) :)
Answer I'm sorry it took so long to work out my answer, but I think you'll find that my Replace method is faster than copying and pasting manually.
Although there's no code to search for tables using the Replace dialog, you can use the browse arrows at the bottom of the vertical scroll bar to jump from table to table. Click the round button between them to set the browse object to Browse by Table. Then click Next Table (the double down arrows), which will select the table, Backspace to delete it, Next Table, Backspace, and so on till they're all gone.
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word) 1999-2009
About Microsoft Word
This topic answers questions related to Microsoft Word stand-alone or Mircrosoft Office Word including Word 2003, Word 2007, Office 2000, and Office XP. You can get Word help on formatting text, tables, tabs, fonts, styles, general Word layouts, bullets, headings, and outlines, using templates, toolbar modifications, and using Track Changes. You may also find tips on linking Word and Excel embedded objects including charts. This site does not provide a general Word tutorial nor the basics of using a word processor. It provides specific answers to using Microsoft Word only. If you do not see your Word question answered in this area then please ask a Word question here