We offer multiple options for exporting documents from Responsive, and the option you select influence the final export.
Select the applicable tab for your edition of Responsive.
First, select the Answer Style you want to set for the export:
Then, you have further control over the formatting of your export based on whether or not you chose to use Word styles within your answers. Review the options below to see which one is right for you.
Select this option when you want the application formatting to control the look and feel of your content in the exported document, and do not want your response template to play any part in the text formatting of your answers.
The following project response is an example of direct, in-application
formatting used to control the font, color and size of the text.
This is the exported Word document. Note that the output retains the
in-application formatting in the answer block.
Select this option when you want the application formatting to control the look and feel of your content in the exported document, with the added benefit of in-paragraph style control leveraging the styles in the response template.
The following project response shows the heading formatted with a style
called Custom Answer Heading.
This is the exported Word document with no matching style present in
the template (it retains the look and feel from the application).
This is the exported Word document using a matching style present in
the template (if the template style attributes are different, it overrides
the formatting; if they are the same, it remains the same).
Select this option when you want the application to fix any project text
formatting inconsistencies.
Note: This is a one size fits all approach; only one answer style can be applied.
This project response shows direct, in-application formatting to control
the font, color and size of the text.
This is the exported Word document. Note that the formatting is overridden
by the selected answer style (except bold/italic).
Select this option when you want the application to fix any project text formatting inconsistencies, with the added benefit of leveraging in-paragraph style control with the response template (if there is a matching style name).
This project response shows the heading formatted with a style called
Custom Answer Heading.
This is the exported Word document with no matching style present in
the template (the look and feel from the application is overridden by
the chosen answer style).
This is the exported Word document with a matching style present in the
template.
Note: If the template style attributes are different, it overrides the formatting; if they are the same, it remains the same.
The following information explains additional styles and how they work.
Microsoft Word offers three types of lists: bulleted lists, numbered lists, and multilevel lists. These are all actually list styles. List styles should be created using a unique list style in conjunction with a new multilevel list. You can have up to nine paragraph styles in the list hierarchy.
Use Table styles only when exporting an entire project section to a pre-formatted
table; do not use them for tables within an Answer field.
Note: The best practice for creating a table in an Answer field is to create your table in Microsoft Word, apply borders and shading, format text using paragraph styles, then paste the table into the Answer field.
Use Character styles to format (font color or highlighting for example) words in a paragraph, not a whole paragraph.
Excel exports inherit any formatting applied in the application, so pay attention to any existing formatting in your project.
Essentials features are subscription-based and may not be available for all users. Contact the Customer Success Team, or customersuccess@responsive.io, for more details.
First, select the Answer Style you want to set for the export:
Then, you have further control over the formatting of your export based on whether or not you chose to use Word styles within your answers. Review the options below to see which one is right for you.
Select this option when you want the application formatting to control the look and feel of your content in the exported document, and do not want your response template to play any part in the text formatting of your answers.
The following project response is an example of direct, in-application
formatting used to control the font, color and size of the text.
This is the exported Word document. Note that the output retains the
in-application formatting in the answer block.
Select this option when you want the application formatting to control the look and feel of your content in the exported document, with the added benefit of in-paragraph style control leveraging the styles in the response template.
The following project response shows the heading formatted with a style
called Custom Answer Heading.
This is the exported Word document with no matching style present in
the template (it retains the look and feel from the application).
This is the exported Word document using a matching style present in
the template (if the template style attributes are different, it overrides
the formatting; if they are the same, it remains the same).
Select this option when you want the application to fix any project text
formatting inconsistencies.
Note: This is a one size fits all approach; only one answer style can be applied.
This project response shows direct, in-application formatting to control
the font, color and size of the text.
This is the exported Word document. Note that the formatting is overridden
by the selected answer style (except bold/italic).
Select this option when you want the application to fix any project text formatting inconsistencies, with the added benefit of leveraging in-paragraph style control with the response template (if there is a matching style name).
This project response shows the heading formatted with a style called
Custom Answer Heading.
This is the exported Word document with no matching style present in
the template (the look and feel from the application is overridden by
the chosen answer style).
This is the exported Word document with a matching style present in the
template.
Note: If the template style attributes are different, it overrides the formatting; if they are the same, it remains the same.
The following information explains additional styles and how they work.
Microsoft Word offers three types of lists: bulleted lists, numbered lists, and multilevel lists. These are all actually list styles. List styles should be created using a unique list style in conjunction with a new multilevel list. You can have up to nine paragraph styles in the list hierarchy.
Use Table styles only when exporting an entire project section to a pre-formatted
table; do not use them for tables within an Answer field.
Note: The best practice for creating a table in an Answer field is to create your table in Microsoft Word, apply borders and shading, format text using paragraph styles, then paste the table into the Answer field.
Use Character styles to format (font color or highlighting for example) words in a paragraph, not a whole paragraph.
Excel exports inherit any formatting applied in the application, so pay attention to any existing formatting in your project.