People frequently need to inject word in xml when processing forms. Unfortunately, few applications provide the features you need to accomplish this task. To do something like this usually involves changing between several software applications, which take time and effort. Fortunately, there is a solution that is applicable for almost any job: DocHub.
DocHub is a professionally-built PDF editor with a full set of useful features in one place. Altering, approving, and sharing paperwork is simple with our online tool, which you can access from any online device.
By following these five easy steps, you'll have your revised xml rapidly. The intuitive interface makes the process fast and effective - stopping switching between windows. Start using DocHub now!
My name is Roman Bleier and in this video Iamp;#39;m going to show how to access the XML date of birth document. So first of all letamp;#39;s create a new word document. Here we have our docx file and letamp;#39;s give it a name, XML languages in this case. I open up my word document, there we go. And now I would like to add a little bit of text. First letamp;#39;s give it a heading, XML languages. Then set this to Heading 1. Next I add a bit more text, letamp;#39;s make a list, letamp;#39;s make a list of XML languages; TEI, XHTML, SVG, and RDF. Now highlight all and make an unordered list or an ordered list. So I save the word document and I close it. Now here we have our word document. Next what we want to do is, basically a word document is a zip file but it has a docx extension, dot docx extension and thatamp;#39;s the reason why Microsoft Word is opening it as default program. If we change the file extension to zip, you get first a message asking us if you really want to d