What's wrong with using endnotes? Which work just like footnotes, only the
text is at the end of the document instead of the bottom of the page.
I believe if you then Save as HTML, the endnotes become hyperlinks.
On 3/25/05 12:14 AM, "Top Spin" wrote:
I am writing a textbook in Word 2000, soon to be Word 2003. I want to
make the mainline of the text as brief and concise as possible, but I
would also like to provide additional information such as is often put
into footnotes, side bars, appendices, etc.
I want this supplementary information to be out of the main text. I
don't want to clutter up the mainline text with sidebars or footnotes
or any such device.
Ideally, I would like the whole thing to be electronic so that I can
put hypertext tags in the document and the user can drill down when
needed, but that is not feasible right now.
In the meantime, I would appreciate suggestions for the best way to
structure this document.
I would like to put all of the supplementary information in an
appendix in some kind of numbered list so that I can put references to
the individual item in the main line text, like an endnote or header
reference. Some of the information will be just a sentence or two, but
some may be more than a page.
I have used numbered lists and headers, but I have had problems with
the references getting all screwed up or even having Word crash if the
text gets moved around very much.
Can anyone suggest a way to approach this that is reliable?
Thanks
--
Running Word 2K SP-3 (9.0.6926)
PC: HP Omnibook 6000
OS: Win 2K SP-4 (5.00.2195)
Email: Usenet-20031220 at spamex.com
(11/03/04)
--
Daiya Mitchell, MVP Mac/Word
Word FAQ:
http://www.word.mvps.org/
MacWord Tips: http://www.word.mvps.org/MacWordNew/
What's an MVP? A volunteer! Read the FAQ:
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/