I posted a copious number of resources that can help you with your Outlook development, and here is a similar post for Word. I'll maintain this, and if you can think of things I have missed, please send me your ideas:
Here's the list of Word developer resources I will maintain and keep up to date.
Articles with code ( or code downloads):
Articles:
Reference Documentation:
Books:
- Office 2003 XML by Evan Lenz, Simon St. Laurent, Mary McRae
- Microsoft .NET Development for Microsoft Office by Andrew Whitechapel
- Office 2003 Programming: Real World Applications by Ty Anderson
- Developing Microsoft Office Solutions: Answers for Office 2003, XP, 2000, & 97 by Ken Bluttman
- Visual Studio Tools for Office: Using C# with Excel, Word, Outlook, and Infopath by Eric Carter, Eric Lippert
- Office 2003 XML for Power Users by Matthew MacDonald
- Office 2003 VBA Development All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies by Richard Mansfield
- Powering Office 2003 with XML (Power Pack Series) by Peter G. Aitken et al.
- XML in Office 2003: Information Sharing with Desktop XML by Charles F. Goldfarb, Priscilla Walmsley
Hands-on-labs:
Code Snippets:
Tools and Utilities:
MVP and 3rd Party Resources
Video:
Blogs:
Newsgroups and Forums:
- microsoft.public.word.vba.general
- microsoft.public.word.vba.customization
- microsoft.public.word.vba.userforms
- microsoft.public.word.vba.beginners
- microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
- microsoft.public.word.vba.beginners
- microsoft.public.office.xml
- microsoft.public.officedev
microsoft.public.office.developer.vba
microsoft.public.office.developer.smarttags
microsoft.public.office.program_forms
microsoft.public.office.program_vba
Get Answers or Give Comments:
Rock Thought for the Day: I purchased the latest CD from the band, Thrice. It is called Vheissu, and it is listenable, but not terribly innovative. I have the sense that these guys have a ton of heart, but their craft is not as convincing. The lyrics are umistakably weak. Here's an example: "so we sing out this, our canticle/ we are the image of the invisible". It sounds like a parody on the Simpsons with Homer steaming his brain trying to find a word that rhymes with 'invisible'. What's next, 'iriscible'? Heaven help us. The album wants to be heavy, but it revs like an engine with no transmission. I wanted to go for a ride, but I became bored sitting in the driveway. I respect Thrice imbuing their music with unguarded God-centered art. They are for real, unlike faith-devoted bands that are too saccharine or falsely hip. If you want to rock for Jesus, it still has to be real rock and roll. Thrice make real rock and roll, but they need a more observant and hard-rocking producer that they fully trust who is not in their circle of faith. Thus, she/he can help them rev the motor and thrash the gears. That's rock and roll!
Rock On