Robert Desprez Communications

  • My Services
  • My Blog
  • About Me
  • Contact Me
You are here: Home / Career Development / Editing Tips in Word: Automated Ways to Find Acronyms

Editing Tips in Word: Automated Ways to Find Acronyms

August 12, 2016 by RDesprez 5 Comments

Tweet

For all the dis­cus­sion about using con­tent man­age­ment, Dar­win Infor­ma­tion Typ­ing Archi­tec­ture (DITA), and writ­ing for tablets and smart­phones, I find that most clients I work with are still writ­ing at least some con­tent in Microsoft Word.

Most tech­ni­cal writ­ers I know agree that Word has its share of weak­ness­es when author­ing long tech­ni­cal doc­u­ments. Still, many clients grav­i­tate towards it because it’s con­sid­ered “free”—it is almost always installed at a client’s workplace.

For a cur­rent client, I edit long tech­ni­cal Word doc­u­ments that are often rid­dled with acronyms.

I edit the con­tent using some of the stan­dard tech­niques used by edi­tors and tech­ni­cal writ­ers: I com­pare the terms used in the doc­u­ment against the department’s style guide and I use an edit­ing check­list. With­in the last year, I’ve also start­ed using Word’s find fea­ture to scru­ti­nize the document’s acronyms and initialisms.

Finding Acronyms Automatically in Word

In almost every doc­u­ment I read for one client, there is an issue with acronyms not being spelled out or acronyms being incon­sis­tent­ly applied. One auto­mat­ed way to find all the acronyms in a doc­u­ment is to use wild­cards in Word’s Find menu. I first dis­cov­ered this trick on LifeHacker’s web site. I doc­u­ment­ed the fol­low­ing steps using Microsoft Word 2016.

To look for acronyms in a document:

  1. In Word, open a file that you want to edit.
  2. Open the Find win­dow (press Ctrl + F on your keyboard).
  3. In the Nav­i­ga­tion pane, select Advanced Find.

Advanced_Find

  1. Click the More » but­ton.
  2. In the Find what field, type <[A‑Z]{2,}>
  3. Select the Use wild­cards check box.

Find_and_replace_wildcards

  1. Click Read­ing High­light, and then select High­light All.

Find_and_replace_highlight_all

Word high­lights all the ini­tialisms and acronyms in the file. Here is an example:

Acronyms in Word_example

I have found that auto­mat­i­cal­ly search­ing for acronyms has been a tremen­dous time saver and has helped me find count­less incon­sis­ten­cies in client files.

When edit­ing tech­ni­cal doc­u­ments, what tips or tricks have you used to find errors and inconsistencies?

Filed Under: Career Development, Online Writing, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog Tagged With: acronyms, documents, editing, Microsoft Word, technical writing

Comments

  1. Mark Henderson says

    August 12, 2016 at 3:57 pm

    Thanks Robert. That was VERY (NOT and acronym!) help­ful. The vast major­i­ty of our clients use Word, and we use Word in our book-writ­ing busi­ness. And doing an auto-acronym check is huge in edit­ing tech­ni­cal (and even non-tech­ni­cal) doc­u­ments. So again, thank you for the con­cise and high­ly effec­tive tip/tutorial.

    Reply
  2. Robert Desprez says

    August 12, 2016 at 9:49 pm

    Thank you Mark!

    Reply
  3. Lilyan says

    August 16, 2016 at 1:37 am

    That would be a good way to cap­ture the acronyms in a short­er documents.
    What I’ve had to do for long doc­u­ments is to cre­ate a macro that picks up acronyms in alpha­bet­i­cal order. A new doc­u­ment is cre­at­ed with a list of the acronyms.
    Copy an paste the entire list into your acronym table. If you cap­ture it cor­rect­ly there’s no for­mat­ting to do.

    Reply
  4. Topm says

    August 17, 2016 at 6:31 pm

    There is a free toolset that does this and much more. Go to http://www.wordaddins.com

    Their Doc­Tools ExtractChanges tool woes a real­ly good job of this. The tool also includes the abil­i­ty to extract review­er com­ments and changes. 

    Anoth­er help­ful Word ad-on is Mike’s Doc­u­ment Toolbox.

    Both of these tools per­form rel­a­tive­ly sim­ple tasks that save you many hours of work.

    Reply
  5. Sue M says

    August 20, 2019 at 1:00 pm

    Absolute­ly bril­liant, thank you

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

About Robert Desprez

I have worked as a Vancouver technical writer for more than 20 years, working at some of British Columbia's largest high-tech firms. I have served in leadership positions for the Society for Technical Communication and have worked as a writing instructor at Vancouver's Simon Fraser University.

Robert Desprez Follow 1,191 242

Vancouver Technical Writer. Former Instructor at Simon Fraser University. Dog Lover. Coffee Drinker. Tennis and Piano Player.

robert_desprez
robert_desprez avatar; Robert Desprez @robert_desprez ·
17 Nov 1990511045618889117

Image for twitter card

Jeff Bezos reportedly to co-lead AI startup called Project Prometheus

Move marks first time the Amazon founder will have an operational role at a company since 2021

www.theglobeandmail.com

Reply on Twitter 1990511045618889117 Retweet on Twitter 1990511045618889117 0 Like on Twitter 1990511045618889117 0 Twitter 1990511045618889117
robert_desprez avatar; Robert Desprez @robert_desprez ·
13 Nov 1988989060904546771

Why long-running tasks autonomously carried out by agentic AI aren’t the future of doc work, and...

As AI agents become more capable, there’s growing eagerness to develop long-running tasks that operate autonomously ...

idratherbewriting.com

Reply on Twitter 1988989060904546771 Retweet on Twitter 1988989060904546771 0 Like on Twitter 1988989060904546771 0 Twitter 1988989060904546771
robert_desprez avatar; Robert Desprez @robert_desprez ·
5 Nov 1985944193135755385

Image for twitter card

Federal budget dedicates over $1B to boost Canadian AI and quantum computing | CBC News

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s first budget proposes providing more than $1 billion over the next five years to bu...

www.cbc.ca

Reply on Twitter 1985944193135755385 Retweet on Twitter 1985944193135755385 0 Like on Twitter 1985944193135755385 0 Twitter 1985944193135755385
robert_desprez avatar; Robert Desprez @robert_desprez ·
4 Nov 1985736843468685471

Gen Z workers shunning the career ladder is more of a reaction to the behaviour of companies /via @globeandmail

Image for twitter card

Gen Z workers shunning the career ladder is more of a reaction to the behaviour of companies

These workers are looking at the path to the corner office with skepticism, which makes sense given that the eco...

www.theglobeandmail.com

Reply on Twitter 1985736843468685471 Retweet on Twitter 1985736843468685471 0 Like on Twitter 1985736843468685471 0 Twitter 1985736843468685471
Load More

Recent Blog Posts

  • Using ChatGPT to read smarter
  • ChatGPT: The AI-powered proofreader
  • Four ways Confluence could be better
  • First impressions of MadCap’s purchase of IXIASOFT

About Me

Robert Desprez I have worked as a Vancouver technical writer for more than 20 years, working at Kodak, Boeing, Teck Resources, and FortisBC. In addition, I have worked as a writing instructor at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver.

Contact Me

Robert Desprez Com­mu­ni­ca­tions Inc.
North Van­cou­ver, British Columbia
Canada
Phone: 604–836-4290

  • Email
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2025  · Robert Desprez Communications Inc.