HOW MANY MERGE OPTIONS are there? NAME THEM.
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Mail merge is a process to create personalized letters and pre-addressed envelopes or mailing labels for mass mailings from a form letter.[1] The feature is usually employed in a word processing document which contains fixed text (which is the same in each output document) and variables (which act as placeholders that are replaced by text from the data source). The feature dates back to early word processors on personal computers, circa 1980. WordStar was perhaps the earliest to provide this, originally via an ancillary program called Mail merge. WordPerfect also offered this capacity for CP/M and MS-DOS systems, and Microsoft Word added it later on.[2]
The data source is typically a spreadsheet or a database which has a field or column for each variable in the template. When the mail merge process is run, the word processing system creates an output document for each row in the database, using the fixed text exactly as it appears.
Mail merge to create a form letter which you intended to print or e-mail multiple times sending each copy to different recipient, you can insert field, such as name or address, which word will replace automatically with information form a database or contact list for each copy of the form letter
The data source is typically a spreadsheet or a database which has a field or column for each variable in the template. When the mail merge process is run, the word processing system creates an output document for each row in the database, using the fixed text exactly as it appears.
Mail merge to create a form letter which you intended to print or e-mail multiple times sending each copy to different recipient, you can insert field, such as name or address, which word will replace automatically with information form a database or contact list for each copy of the form letter
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