Hope you guys are still active and maybe can help me. (just like in macro 1) and not at the end of the document. What i reallly could use is: Copy a range off page (just like in macro 2) and past the right after the copied pages. The second macro copies a range of pages en past them at the end of the document. It copies a page en past it right after that page. Its been a while when this thread is being updated but maybe someone can help me. ![]() I think I had better use Mike from now on to make my name be consistent. I put down David in almost all of my past posts. And now you will see the specified page and its header and footer are copied to the target document at. Create a new Word document, and press Ctrl + V keys together to paste the page. Press Ctrl + C keys together to copy the page. Do you have a real name?Hi Tony,Thank you for your reply which is very useful. Select the whole page you will copy, including the section break mark you added just now. Paste > Next> End With> Completely off-topic: I see you sign yourself as Mike here but as David in > another post. Copy> End With> With ActiveDocument.Range > For i = 1 To Count>. GoTo(wdGoToPage, wdGoToAbsolute,, + 1).Start >. ![]() GoTo(wdGoToPage, wdGoToAbsolute,, ).Start >. > On 2月10日, 下午7時43分, "Tony Jollans" wrote: > This is slightly more complicated but, with the same caveat as before, this > should do it:> = InputBox("Please Enter First Page Number") > = InputBox("Please Enter Last Page Number") > Count = InputBox("Please Enter Number of times to duplicate") > With ActiveDocument.Range >. Op maandag 11 februari 2008 13:18:29 UTC+1 schreef cyberdude:
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