You are welcome. For your second question, see the following article:
Creating a Table of Contents Spanning Multiple Documents
http://pubs.logicalexpressions.com/P...cle.asp?ID=148
--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP
"Anita" wrote in message
...
Hi Stefan,
Thanx for your help. I am sorted now.
But I have another question, please: I am working with various
small
documents (the different chapters, 5 - 30 pages each) which
ultimately makes
up a total combined document (about 12 chapters). The small
documents remain
individually saved files. Each small document have it's own table
of
contents, created using Insert Reference Index and Tables.
However, I
would need a "combined" ToC for the complete document, incorporating
all the
little ToC'. If the ToC's was normal text, I could just copy and
paste the
small ToC's, into the combined ToC. But it seems I would not be
able to do
that now? It there a way to sort of "convert the ToC field to normal
text"
after I have copied it to the combined ToC? Or will I be able to
just copy
and paste, into the combined ToC. Obviously I would only be able to
do that
at the end, when all the small ToC's have been finalised, as the
"update ToC"
will not also update the combined ToC?
"Stefan Blom" wrote:
"Anita" wrote in message
...
Document map does not show all my heading that I have formatted
according to
my resonalised styles and formatting. I have tried all the
Office
Assistants's advice but to no avail.
The Document Map cannot display headings in table cells or text
boxes.
And note that any custom styles used for headings must have an
Outline
Level specified to be visible in the Document Map. To specify an
Outline Level, use the Paragraph dialog box (in the Modify Style
dialog box, click FormatParagraphIndents and Spacing tab).
Fortunately is does not show, what it is not surposed to show,
as I
have
heard happens to others.
Thanx.
This is probably a sign that you are using styles properly. :-)
--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP