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If you wish to create a new template, it is recommended that you start with an existing fully-formed example of the type of document you want to utilize to build a template. Click the SmartAdvocate tab in the top tool bar in Word or Excel to open the merge code and template options.

For each piece of text in the document that contains information that would be part of the SmartAdvocate case file, perform the following steps:

  • Highlight (select) the text.

  • Look through the merge codes visible in the top tool bar (commonly used merge codes) to see if one of them represents the information in the selected text. (For example, if the text is the full name of the plaintiff in the case, you would be looking for the "Name" code in the Plaintiff Merge Codes section of the top tool bar.)

  • If you did not find the merge code in the top tool bar, click Merge Codes in the Insert section of the top tool bar. This will bring up a list of all the merge codes in the system.

  • Find the merge code that represents the information in the selected text. To make it easier to find your merge code, you can try choosing the code type from the dropdown above the list and/or use the filter row at the top of the list to narrow down the visible codes. When you have found it, click Insert Selected Merge Code and Hide Dialog to replace the text with the code and close the list.

For any information that would not necessarily be part of the SmartAdvocate case file, but which might vary between different documents created from that template (e.g. the type of document being served in a template of an affidavit of service), you can use a post-generation prompt. Click the Prompt icon in the Insert section of the top tool bar to create a prompt, then replace "Message Text" with a description of the information you want to insert at that point. After the document is generated, Word or Excel will prompt you with the description you used and a text input field that you will fill in with the text you wish to insert at that point. (You can also replace "Default Value" with any text you want to be in the input field by default; if you choose not to, the input field will simply be blank by default.)

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There are several additional tools that merge codes offer that are available through the use of suffixes. A merge code suffix is text, enclosed in angle brackets (< >), appended to the main merge code, within the square brackets ([ ]), with a comma. For example, <! [PL-AGE,<Youngest Plaintiff>] !> would be a merge code with a suffix, and <Youngest Plaintiff> would be the suffix. Suffixes can serve a number of purposes. Suffixes have no effect if the merge code represents unambiguous information; the merge code is replaced during document generation without any prompts. However, if the merge code with a suffix represents information that might be ambiguous, it is not replaced at the time the document is generated; instead, it either triggers a prompt in Word or Excel that asks the user to select the appropriate option once the document is generated, or it is automatically replaced after the document is generated based on similar selections earlier in the document. There are four main types of suffixes:

  • An asterisk suffix. This is any suffix where the first character after the opening angle bracket is an asterisk, such as <*Example>. Merge codes with an asterisk suffix always trigger a prompt, the title of which is whatever text follows the asterisk (possibly none). You can either type in an asterisk suffix manually, or, if you are selecting the merge code from the full list, you can select the Force User Input option below the list and write the title of the prompt (if any) in the Question field.

  • A hash suffix. This is any suffix where the first character after the opening angle bracket is a hash symbol, such as <#Example>. Merge codes with a hash suffix always trigger a prompt, the title of which is whatever text follows the hash symbol (possibly none). Additionally, merge codes with a hash suffix allow the user to select multiple options and gives the user a choice as to the text that will separate them (e.g. a comma and space, or a new line) when they are substituted in for the merge code. You can either type in a hash suffix manually, or, if you are selecting the merge code from the full list, you can select the Multiple Select option below the list and write the title of the prompt (if any) that will appear in the Question field.

  • A standard suffix. This is any suffix where the first non-space character after the opening angle bracket is neither an asterisk nor a hash symbol, such as <Example>. Merge codes with a standard suffix only trigger a prompt if there has not already been a merge code with the same suffix, requiring the same selection, earlier in the document. For example, if the first two merge codes in a document are <! [PL-FIRST-NAME,<Lead Plaintiff>] !> and 

Create and Use UDF Merge Codes

  1. First create the UDF using UDF Editor and give the UDF a “Short Name” (The Short Name will become the UDF Merge Code)

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2. When creating your template, select “Dynamic Merge Code” to choose the UDF merge Code

3. Choose the type of UDF from the list on the top section of the list of Dynamic Merge Codes (e.g., Case UDF, etc.)
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4. You will see your UDF Merge Code that was created in Step 1 above.Image Removed

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5. From here the UDF Merge code is inserted in your template the same way as any ‘regular’ merge code.