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Linking Table of Contents to show text from a header
I am currently putting togather the annual reports for a client and am
linking the section titles to my table of contents using alt+shift+o. I am having difficulty when the client has the title of the section in the header rather than as a heading as the method I mentiond before doesn't work. I can't add a heading in as the report has to match the client exactly, does anyone know how to get around this? |
#2
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Linking Table of Contents to show text from a header
Stacks324 wrote:
I am currently putting togather the annual reports for a client and am linking the section titles to my table of contents using alt+shift+o. I am having difficulty when the client has the title of the section in the header rather than as a heading as the method I mentiond before doesn't work. I can't add a heading in as the report has to match the client exactly, does anyone know how to get around this? The TOC generator can't "see" the header, footer, text box, and other stories other than the main text. (The article http://word.mvps.org/faqs/customizat...ceAnywhere.htm explains about stories in Word documents.) Instead, you can place a hidden, nonprinting field in the main text at the proper location and tell the TOC to include it. At each point where you would normally mark a section title heading (but there isn't one now), click Insert Field and choose to insert a TC field. Enter the text you want to appear in the table of contents. Check the box for "outline level" and tell it what level to use. TC fields are automatically marked as Hidden text. Unlike most fields whose codes are displayed by Shift+F9 or Alt+F9, these fields appear only when you display Hidden text (for example, by clicking the ¶ button). In the Table of Contents dialog, click the Options button and check the box for the Table Entry Fields option. You should leave the Styles option checked as well, so the TOC will include both kinds of entries. Then update the TOC. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
#3
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Linking Table of Contents to show text from a header
If Stacks324 is creating the TOC using Alt+Shift+O, then he/she is already
using TC fields. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Stacks324 wrote: I am currently putting togather the annual reports for a client and am linking the section titles to my table of contents using alt+shift+o. I am having difficulty when the client has the title of the section in the header rather than as a heading as the method I mentiond before doesn't work. I can't add a heading in as the report has to match the client exactly, does anyone know how to get around this? The TOC generator can't "see" the header, footer, text box, and other stories other than the main text. (The article http://word.mvps.org/faqs/customizat...ceAnywhere.htm explains about stories in Word documents.) Instead, you can place a hidden, nonprinting field in the main text at the proper location and tell the TOC to include it. At each point where you would normally mark a section title heading (but there isn't one now), click Insert Field and choose to insert a TC field. Enter the text you want to appear in the table of contents. Check the box for "outline level" and tell it what level to use. TC fields are automatically marked as Hidden text. Unlike most fields whose codes are displayed by Shift+F9 or Alt+F9, these fields appear only when you display Hidden text (for example, by clicking the ¶ button). In the Table of Contents dialog, click the Options button and check the box for the Table Entry Fields option. You should leave the Styles option checked as well, so the TOC will include both kinds of entries. Then update the TOC. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
#4
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Linking Table of Contents to show text from a header
Yes, I realized that -- of course, after I hit Send.
Still, the TC fields must be in the main text, not in the header pane or any other story. Since the text to be displayed in the TOC isn't present in the main text, the choice is either to construct the TC field in the header and then cut/paste it to the main text (displaying Hidden text in order to be able to see it), or to construct the field directly in the main text. Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: If Stacks324 is creating the TOC using Alt+Shift+O, then he/she is already using TC fields. "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Stacks324 wrote: I am currently putting togather the annual reports for a client and am linking the section titles to my table of contents using alt+shift+o. I am having difficulty when the client has the title of the section in the header rather than as a heading as the method I mentiond before doesn't work. I can't add a heading in as the report has to match the client exactly, does anyone know how to get around this? The TOC generator can't "see" the header, footer, text box, and other stories other than the main text. (The article http://word.mvps.org/faqs/customizat...ceAnywhere.htm explains about stories in Word documents.) Instead, you can place a hidden, nonprinting field in the main text at the proper location and tell the TOC to include it. At each point where you would normally mark a section title heading (but there isn't one now), click Insert Field and choose to insert a TC field. Enter the text you want to appear in the table of contents. Check the box for "outline level" and tell it what level to use. TC fields are automatically marked as Hidden text. Unlike most fields whose codes are displayed by Shift+F9 or Alt+F9, these fields appear only when you display Hidden text (for example, by clicking the ¶ button). In the Table of Contents dialog, click the Options button and check the box for the Table Entry Fields option. You should leave the Styles option checked as well, so the TOC will include both kinds of entries. Then update the TOC. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
#5
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Linking Table of Contents to show text from a header
Right. I wasn't faulting your advice, just pointing out that the instruction
on what a TC field is and how to insert one was probably unneeded! -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Yes, I realized that -- of course, after I hit Send. Still, the TC fields must be in the main text, not in the header pane or any other story. Since the text to be displayed in the TOC isn't present in the main text, the choice is either to construct the TC field in the header and then cut/paste it to the main text (displaying Hidden text in order to be able to see it), or to construct the field directly in the main text. Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: If Stacks324 is creating the TOC using Alt+Shift+O, then he/she is already using TC fields. "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Stacks324 wrote: I am currently putting togather the annual reports for a client and am linking the section titles to my table of contents using alt+shift+o. I am having difficulty when the client has the title of the section in the header rather than as a heading as the method I mentiond before doesn't work. I can't add a heading in as the report has to match the client exactly, does anyone know how to get around this? The TOC generator can't "see" the header, footer, text box, and other stories other than the main text. (The article http://word.mvps.org/faqs/customizat...ceAnywhere.htm explains about stories in Word documents.) Instead, you can place a hidden, nonprinting field in the main text at the proper location and tell the TOC to include it. At each point where you would normally mark a section title heading (but there isn't one now), click Insert Field and choose to insert a TC field. Enter the text you want to appear in the table of contents. Check the box for "outline level" and tell it what level to use. TC fields are automatically marked as Hidden text. Unlike most fields whose codes are displayed by Shift+F9 or Alt+F9, these fields appear only when you display Hidden text (for example, by clicking the ¶ button). In the Table of Contents dialog, click the Options button and check the box for the Table Entry Fields option. You should leave the Styles option checked as well, so the TOC will include both kinds of entries. Then update the TOC. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
#6
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Linking Table of Contents to show text from a header
When I insert fieldTC and hit OK, i don't get any box to check to tell it
what level to place the text in the TOC...What am I doing wrong...This is Mac 2008 "Jay Freedman" wrote: Stacks324 wrote: I am currently putting togather the annual reports for a client and am linking the section titles to my table of contents using alt+shift+o. I am having difficulty when the client has the title of the section in the header rather than as a heading as the method I mentiond before doesn't work. I can't add a heading in as the report has to match the client exactly, does anyone know how to get around this? The TOC generator can't "see" the header, footer, text box, and other stories other than the main text. (The article http://word.mvps.org/faqs/customizat...ceAnywhere.htm explains about stories in Word documents.) Instead, you can place a hidden, nonprinting field in the main text at the proper location and tell the TOC to include it. At each point where you would normally mark a section title heading (but there isn't one now), click Insert Field and choose to insert a TC field. Enter the text you want to appear in the table of contents. Check the box for "outline level" and tell it what level to use. TC fields are automatically marked as Hidden text. Unlike most fields whose codes are displayed by Shift+F9 or Alt+F9, these fields appear only when you display Hidden text (for example, by clicking the ¶ button). In the Table of Contents dialog, click the Options button and check the box for the Table Entry Fields option. You should leave the Styles option checked as well, so the TOC will include both kinds of entries. Then update the TOC. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
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