On 6/10/05, Gustavo Caetano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Since it may be an off topic, I apologize myself in precedence.
> 
> The fact came up today as I was working on a writer's website. He sent me
> many of his stuff, all in doc.
> 
> So, I hade to copy and past the plain text and insert each <p> and </p> for
> each paragraph of each text myself. 
> 
> Needless to say after the 10th text I couldn't see a <p> anymore.
> 
> So, how do you deal if this kind of situation? If you want to keep your
> code
> clean, without those weird tags and classes inserted by some softwares that
> allow you to paste a plain text straight to HTML is there any other
> alternative than doing like I've done?

I may be misunderstanding you, but if you opened a file in MS Word,
why not use a series of find & replace in Word? First, eliminate
double paragraphs ( find ^p^p / replace with ^p ), then use find &
replace to add the paragraph tags: ( find ^p / replace with </p>^p<p>
). You'll need to add a <p> before the first paragraph, but the
computer shoud end up doing most of the work (the way it's *supposed*
to be!) :-)

T.R.
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