Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
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Help with styles and/or outline level relating to table of con
If there are specific styles being used that have an outline level of 1, you
can modify the outline level in the style. If the outline level doesn't
belong to the style and has been applied as direct formatting, then you can
change it by resetting the paragraph to the default style formatting. Of
course, if both the formatting and the outline level have been applied as
direct formatting (probably to Normal style), then you're up a creek!
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
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"td" wrote in message
...
Thanks for the suggestion, but because of a detail that I inadvertently
left
out, this particular approach you have suggested will not (I don't think)
help my situation. At least not without a creative way to solve another
related problem.
One of the other reasons I use headings is to put my body sections (and,
consequently, table of contents entries, since I create the TOC after I do
the alphabetization) in alphabetical order. I've found an easy way to
alphabetize my body sections, but it requires that I have the party names
"stand out" as the highest outline level. What I do (or have the code do)
is
switch to outline view, show only the highest outline level (which,
ideally,
is limited to my headings and ONLY my headings), manually select all of
the
headings (it does NOT work if you do a "select all" for some reason), go
to
Table|Sort, and select paragraph/ascending. It then sorts all of my
headings
AND the text that belongs to those headings. It's beautiful and saves me
hours of work. The code runs this process before it creats the table of
contents, so that the body sections AND TOC entries are in alphabetical
order.
If I have any other bits of text that "stand out" as high as my headings
(with respect to outline level), then they mess EVERYTHING up. They
basically get chopped up and alphabetized with the rest of the heading
level
1 stuff. And let me tell you... people filing documents with us put all
kinds of stuff in heading level 1. It's a problem.
I quite agree that your way seems easier IF I didn't need to alphabetize
also (in fact, at first I thought you had solved my problem, before I
remembered this other stuff), but the bosses will not put up with hundreds
of
pages of non-alphabetized stuff, and I don't blame them. That would not
be
practical to use.
Any alternative ideas of ways to solve this problem?
If not, then I'd be back to my original question about ways to lower
outline
level of the docuemnts when they are filed, without changing the other
physical formatting. Then I can mark them electronically, have my program
chop them up, add headings, alphabetize, and add the TOC.
Thanks,
Tom
"Daiya Mitchell" wrote:
I'd approach the problem from a different end. Instead of changing
their formatting, change your TOC so that it only uses your custom
styles, which you can apply as you go through and mark the document.
See he
http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/wordfaqs/TOCTips.htm
Probably "Use the TOC Options" is the information most directly
applicable, under "Controlling what goes into the TOC"
td wrote:
Hi,
I have a problem related to how to stop certain entries in a document
from
ending up in my table of contents.
I work for a government agency, and we often receive many comments
filed on
certain proposed policies. We have made a really useful little
program which
allows us to go through those filings and "mark" the text in them as
belonging to a specific topic. When we're done, we run another
program which
goes through all of the filings, "collects" entries it sees as being
marked
for specific topics and creates separate "topic documents." Those
topic
documents begin with a table of contents which lists the party names
of the
commenters for that topic. In the body of the topic document, each
entry has
a heading (Heading 1 style) that is the party name, and then the
pasted text
from that party's filing that relates to that topic.
Here's my problem... Some of these parties already use certain styles
and
formatting in their submitted documents. Some of them already use
Heading 1.
Some of them don't use Heading 1, but their custom styles end up in
my table
of contents (which is set to only include level 1 text) anyway.
Question: I'd like to make a macro which somehow "lowers" the level
of the
text in the submitted documents, but without actually changing the
physical
format. In other words, I don't want to change how the documents
look, just
whether their text interferes with my table of contents. There are so
many
different settings though, and I'm not sure which are relevant. And I
just
generally get confused with Word's styles and formatting. It seems
that if I
manually reduce the heading level (if they even used a heading level)
or the
outline level, it changes the formatting. What, if anything, can I
do?
So far I've been just manually setting everything to body text, but
this
really screws up their formatting, which sometimes can make it
difficult to
tell how their original document was organized with headings and such.
Thanks,
Tom
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