Word 2003 inserted graphic but cant see the text
I inserted some graphics in a document,
but now I can’t see them; or there is just an empty box where one
should be; or my graphics won’t print.
The solutions
Word 2003 and earlier
•On the View menu or horizontal scroll bar, choose Print Layout
view. Floating (wrapped) graphics don't display in Normal view.
•Go to Tools | Options | View and make sure that “Drawings” is
checked and that “Picture placeholders” is not checked.
•If some graphics are not printing (or not displaying in Print
Preview), go to Tools | Options | Print and make sure that “Drawing
objects” is checked.
•Go to Format | Paragraph and make sure that line spacing of the
paragraph the picture is in is not set to an Exact value.
If none of these suggestions help, see below.
Word 2007
•On the View tab of the Ribbon or on the status bar, choose Print
Layout view. Wrapped graphics don’t display in Draft view.
•Go to Office Button | Word Options | Advanced: Show document
content and make sure that “Show drawings and text boxes on screen”
is checked and that “Show picture placeholders” is not checked.
•If some graphics are not printing (or not displaying in Print
Preview), go to Office Button | Word Options | Display: Printing
options and make sure that “Print drawings created in Word” is
checked.
•On the Home tab of the Ribbon, locate the Paragraph group and click
the dialog launcher arrow in the bottom right corner to open the
Paragraph dialog; in that dialog, make sure that line spacing of the
paragraph the picture is in is not set to an Exact value.
If none of these suggestions help, see below.
The explanation
An understanding of the possibilities requires a little background.
To understand how Word deals with and displays graphics and other
objects in Word, see also the excellent article on this site The
draw layer: a metaphysical space; and the excellent MSKB article
WD97: General Information about Floating Objects. The articles
explain the difference between floating and inline objects (and how
to convert one to the other) and describe the various layers in
Word.
Every document in Word has several layers, including the text layer,
the drawing layer(s), and the header/footer layer. The header/footer
layer is like the “background” in a page layout application:
anything you put there will appear on every page (and can “float”
anywhere on the page so long as it's anchored to the header or
footer paragraph).
Text, unless it is in a text box (or a header or footer) is always
in the text layer. Graphics can also be placed in the text layer.
They are then said to be In Line With Text or “inline.” An inline
object is part of the text stream and moves with it. Its formatting
is determined by the formatting of the paragraph it is in (centered,
left-aligned, with Spacing Before/After, and so on). Note that one
reason an inline graphic may be incorrectly displayed is that the
line spacing of the paragraph it is in has been set to an exact
amount too small to accommodate the graphic.
Note: Objects in the text layer (inline objects) are visible in any
view in Word 2003 and earlier; Word 2007 handles inline graphics
somewhat differently. They are displayed as expected in Print Layout
view. In Draft view, however, they are displayed as expected in Word
97–2003 format (Compatibility Mode) documents, but in Word
2007–format documents, there is just a blank space that can be
selected.
Drawings (that is, AutoShapes created with the drawing tool,
WordArt, text boxes, and “floating” or “wrapped” graphics) are in
the drawing layer. They are not part of the text stream, though each
has to be anchored to a text paragraph. They can float anywhere on
the page, inside or outside the margins and can be Behind Text or In
Front of Text or can have text wrapped around them in various ways.
Objects in the drawing layer are visible in Print Layout view and
Print Preview but not in Normal (Draft) view. Interestingly, a frame
is a sort of hybrid object that can appear to float (and text can be
wrapped around it), but it is actually inline and can be viewed
(though not in position) in Normal (Draft) view.
So if you are in Normal (Draft) view, you will not see any floating
(wrapped) objects at all. There are also several Options settings
that further affect what graphics are visible.
•If you are in Normal/Draft view, naturally you will not be able to
see floating objects. But if “Picture placeholders” is checked,
inline graphics will also not be displayed. Instead you will see an
empty box the size of the picture.
•If you are in Print Layout view and “Picture placeholders” is
checked, you will not see inline graphics. Furthermore, if
“Drawings” (or “Show drawings and text boxes on screen”) is not
checked, you will not see floating objects either. Note that for
this purpose “drawings” means anything in the drawing
layer—AutoShapes, WordArt, text boxes, and wrapped (floating)
graphics.
•If you are in Print Preview and “Drawing objects” (or “Print
drawings created in Word”) is not checked, you will not see any
floating/wrapped objects, and they will not print, either. Again,
“drawing objects” or “drawings” means any object in the drawing
layer.
Objects in the header and footer are (like the rest of the
header/footer) dimmed except when you are working in the
header/footer pane.
Graphics pasted from the Web
The default Paste behavior if you copy a picture from a Web site and
paste into Word 2000 and above is to create a field such as:
{ INCLUDEPICTURE "http://www.whatever.com//temp.gif" \*
MERGEFORMATINET }
(Incidentally, there doesn't appear to be any reference to the
MergeFormatInet switch either in Word's Help or in the Microsoft
Knowledge Base).
If the picture is wrapped (floating), you will need to change it to
inline in order to see the field.
If you try pasting from a Web page when working offline, Word just
hangs. And if you print your document when working offline, with
“Update fields” enabled, your pictures just disappear.
The issue here is that most pictures displayed on Web pages are just
links to the locations of the pictures online, and what you are
pasting is that link. There are several ways to work around this:
•Paste the picture and immediately press Ctrl+Shift+F9 to unlink it.
The picture will then be embedded in your document.
•If you find that Word hangs when you try to paste, you can instead
select Edit | Paste Special and choose “Device-independent Bitmap”
instead of the default of “HTML format.”
•The best approach, however, is to right-click on the image on the
Web page and choose Save Image. Save it in My Pictures or some other
convenient location on your hard drive, and then insert it in your
Word document using Insert | Picture. The advantage to this approach
is that, if anything happens to the picture in your document, you
still have it saved externally. Also, you can edit (crop, compress,
recolor) the picture in your document without affecting the
original. Further, if the document does not need to be portable, you
may be able to reduce the file size by linking to the external
picture instead of embedding it.