Do you see the hyperlink (blue and underlined) or do you see the field code (black text inside curly braces like {HYPERLINK etc.} )? If it's the field code, press Alt+F9 to toggle to the result -- does that fix it?
But by doing this you will remove your hyperlink...if you want that ur hyperlink stays then you will need to go to circle with the office logo at the top left corner...at the bottom u will see word options click on that and go to advanced and scroll down to the "Show document content" section. Right above the "Field shading" box, there is an option that says, "Show field codes instead of their values." If that has a check next to it, unclick it and hit OK, and your hyperlinks will return to normal in your Word documents. There you have it! Problem solved.
By graphical do you mean an image or graphical text?To display an image that functions as a hyperlink, use To display a hyperlink in a color other than blue, use Text hereReplace the X's with the color code, see a list at www.computerhope.com/htmcolor.htm
that means the one which u used to convert your docment into pdf is not good,otherwise it will not have this problems. i think you can try this one.it's good,many people like it. http://www.simpopdf.com/pdf-to-word.html
if you want to insert a hyperlink you write some code before and after the words you want to act as a link like: this is a link
To remove an underline from a hyperlink in CSS you have to use text-decoration and set it to none. An example is below: a {text-decoration: none;} a:hover {text-decoration: underline;}a {text-decoration:none}
Select the text or picture that you want to display as the hyperlink.On the Insert tab, in the Links group, click Hyperlink
In computing, a hyperlink is a reference to data that the reader can directly follow either by clicking or by hovering or that is followed automatically. A hyperlink has an anchor, which is the location within a certain type of a document from which the hyperlink can be followed only from the homepage; the document containing a hyperlink is known as its source code document. In some hypertext, hyperlinks can be bidirectional: they can be followed in two directions, so both ends act as anchors and as targets. More complex arrangements exist, such as many-to-many links.
CTRL - K inserts a hyperlink to selected text in various applications.
Its called a hyperlink
Hyperlinks
A shortcut menu will display when you right-click a link.
A shortcut menu will display when you right-click a link.
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