Hey Taz,
I just noticed that that Lorrie person was talking about TOC's, and not
Indexes.
My bad,
Bennie
P.S. I'm still looking for an actual written instruction that shows exactly
where in a document that you're supposed to put an XE subentry field code. I
know now thru experimenting on my own, but there has to be an actual document
describing the process somewhere. I'm noticing that a lot of this computer
information written about in various articles is simply assumed by the
author, or passed along by word of mouth--and thus certain steps get glossed
over by all of them in their writings--because none of them really know of
the step's origins, and they don't want to be seen as not knowing. Who does!
"CyberTaz" wrote:
I'm not sure where this conversation originated, but just for clarification:
"Main Entry" & "Subentry" are aspects of an *Index*, and have nothing to do
with a Table of Contents. A TOC can have multiple *levels* (based on Heading
Styles for example), but that is a totally different matter with different
terminology.
Regards |:)
Bob Jones
[MVP] Office:Mac
On 9/2/07 1:52 PM, in article
, "Bennie"
wrote:
Hey Lorrie,
This is Bennie over at "Subentry-Word 2003." I noticed that you asked the
same question that I did about "Subentries." Getting a straight answer to
such a simple question is like pulling teeth!
If you check over here, you might find the information that you sought way
back when.
Bennie
"lorrie" wrote:
hi
I am trying to create a basic table of contents, i have seen where it says
"Subentry" underneath the word "Main entry" i have looked all of the place
but it doesn't really explain in plain english.
Sorry if i have double posted but i missed out something, i just wanted to
know what "subentry" means & how to use it?
Help