A boilerplate in a merged document refers to standardized text or content that can be reused across different documents without significant changes. This often includes legal disclaimers, company information, or standard clauses that remain consistent regardless of the specific details of each document. In the context of mail merges, boilerplate content helps maintain uniformity while allowing for personalization in other sections. It streamlines the document creation process by reducing redundancy.
Depending on the context, boilerplate language is a set of phrases, sentences, paragraphs and sometimes pages of text included in a document or response that has been pre-written. The boilerplate language is copied and pasted into a new [context] document so that the writer of the new document is not required to craft what is included thereby. Boilerplate language is usually written by someone in charge, whether it be a PR person, a lawyer, an officer, or someone else, who has the authority to write the boilerplate language. Boilerplate language usually states a position, offers an idea, or puts forward some standard. The auto-signature on an e-mail message can be considered boilerplate language, as an example.
A merged document.
A main document, which can be an ordinary Word document, such as a letter, or it could from a template.
Merged documents can be very useful ! Suppose you were running a sports club of 200 people, and you wanted to send them all the same letter... You could use a merge document to print the letter out, with each persons details merged into it.
Boilerplate - robot - was created in 2000.
Form letters and mailing labels. Any kind of document that merges "dynamic" database-type information into static "boilerplate".
When you merge letters to a new document in Microsoft Word, the new document is typically named "Document1," "Document2," or a similar default name based on the number of documents already open. If you save the merged document, you can then choose a specific name and file location. The original template document remains unchanged, while the new document contains the merged data.
No
No
A bitext is a merged document composed of both source- and target-language versions of a given text.
"Boilerplate" is a term used when a standard form is used, instead of something written from scratch. A boilerplate divorce would be one that follows a standard form and can be done inexpensively because it doesn't involve a lot of personal attention from lawyers.
sort