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#1
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Continuous section break adds new page...
A chapter in the book I'm writing has subheadings which need to be continuous
page breaks. When I insert a continuous page break, Word inserts a new page. I tried changing the settings in "Word Options" to "Lay out footnotes like Word 6.x", but that only made the problem worse. The only way I've managed to fix the problem is to insert the continuous section break in front of the first word at the top of the page. The problem is that if I further edit the document and insert earlier material, it moves all of the information following the continuous section break to a new page. This creates split paragraphs. Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? |
#2
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Continuous section break adds new page...
This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading?
What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need for the section breaks? Please explain what you are trying to achieve, Also which version of Word and OS and are they fully patched up to date? -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "trj27" wrote in message ... A chapter in the book I'm writing has subheadings which need to be continuous page breaks. When I insert a continuous page break, Word inserts a new page. I tried changing the settings in "Word Options" to "Lay out footnotes like Word 6.x", but that only made the problem worse. The only way I've managed to fix the problem is to insert the continuous section break in front of the first word at the top of the page. The problem is that if I further edit the document and insert earlier material, it moves all of the information following the continuous section break to a new page. This creates split paragraphs. Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? |
#3
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Continuous section break adds new page...
Thanks for your reply!
The fix re the footnote compatibility option was a suggestion I read on another community page on this web site. I'm running Word 2007 (12.0.6504.5000) SP2 MSO (12.0.6425.1000). I have XP Professional 5.6.2600 SP3 Build 2600. I'm trying to use continuous section breaks so that I can alter the header information on various pages. For example, my chapter has three major headings (hypothetically) A. Cats; B. Dogs; C. Birds. On every even page, I want the header to Read: "Chapter 1." On every odd, page, I want the appropriate subsection heading (either A, B, or C) to appear in the header. I thoiught the way to do that was to do a section break, but I don't want the text to start on a new page. When I insert the "Continuous Section Break," however, Word inserts a new page. I understood from another user's comment that this has something to do with how Word deals with footnotes, i.e., it doesn't like footnotes from a previous section to appear on the page with another section, and this could be the cause of my problem. Unfortunately, my "patch" fix is simply to insert the break (continuous) in front of the first word that appears on the page. This is the only way I've been able to avoid the problem. However, if I then insert a new paragraph at the beginning of the doc, for example, it really screws up the formatting. Any suggestions? "Terry Farrell" wrote: This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading? What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need for the section breaks? Please explain what you are trying to achieve, Also which version of Word and OS and are they fully patched up to date? -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "trj27" wrote in message ... A chapter in the book I'm writing has subheadings which need to be continuous page breaks. When I insert a continuous page break, Word inserts a new page. I tried changing the settings in "Word Options" to "Lay out footnotes like Word 6.x", but that only made the problem worse. The only way I've managed to fix the problem is to insert the continuous section break in front of the first word at the top of the page. The problem is that if I further edit the document and insert earlier material, it moves all of the information following the continuous section break to a new page. This creates split paragraphs. Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? |
#4
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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Continuous section break adds new page...
As far as I know there's no fix for the footnote-section break problem.
Fortunately, you don't need it, and you don't need nearly so many section breaks because you can use regular page breaks (or include "page break before" in style settings) when necessary. Use odd an even headers and one style ref for the odd pages and another for the even. See http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/HeaderFooter.htm and http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/StyleRef.htm for more information. Pam trj27 wrote: Thanks for your reply! The fix re the footnote compatibility option was a suggestion I read on another community page on this web site. I'm running Word 2007 (12.0.6504.5000) SP2 MSO (12.0.6425.1000). I have XP Professional 5.6.2600 SP3 Build 2600. I'm trying to use continuous section breaks so that I can alter the header information on various pages. For example, my chapter has three major headings (hypothetically) A. Cats; B. Dogs; C. Birds. On every even page, I want the header to Read: "Chapter 1." On every odd, page, I want the appropriate subsection heading (either A, B, or C) to appear in the header. I thoiught the way to do that was to do a section break, but I don't want the text to start on a new page. When I insert the "Continuous Section Break," however, Word inserts a new page. I understood from another user's comment that this has something to do with how Word deals with footnotes, i.e., it doesn't like footnotes from a previous section to appear on the page with another section, and this could be the cause of my problem. Unfortunately, my "patch" fix is simply to insert the break (continuous) in front of the first word that appears on the page. This is the only way I've been able to avoid the problem. However, if I then insert a new paragraph at the beginning of the doc, for example, it really screws up the formatting. Any suggestions? This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading? What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need [quoted text clipped - 19 lines] Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? -- Message posted via OfficeKB.com http://www.officekb.com/Uwe/Forums.a...ayout/200907/1 |
#5
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Continuous section break adds new page...
Pam,
Thanks for your response, but I don't believe you've understood the problem because your solution doesn't work for me. I have different subsections in my chapter and I want the heading for each subsection in the header. This is not just the difference between even and odd pages. All the even pages are the same. That part's easy. But, the odd pages are almost all different. Maybe I just haven't understood your suggestion properly. I thought the only way to get the headers to be different like that was to use section breaks. Anyway, thanks for trying to help! "Pamelia Caswell via OfficeKB.com" wrote: As far as I know there's no fix for the footnote-section break problem. Fortunately, you don't need it, and you don't need nearly so many section breaks because you can use regular page breaks (or include "page break before" in style settings) when necessary. Use odd an even headers and one style ref for the odd pages and another for the even. See http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/HeaderFooter.htm and http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/StyleRef.htm for more information. Pam trj27 wrote: Thanks for your reply! The fix re the footnote compatibility option was a suggestion I read on another community page on this web site. I'm running Word 2007 (12.0.6504.5000) SP2 MSO (12.0.6425.1000). I have XP Professional 5.6.2600 SP3 Build 2600. I'm trying to use continuous section breaks so that I can alter the header information on various pages. For example, my chapter has three major headings (hypothetically) A. Cats; B. Dogs; C. Birds. On every even page, I want the header to Read: "Chapter 1." On every odd, page, I want the appropriate subsection heading (either A, B, or C) to appear in the header. I thoiught the way to do that was to do a section break, but I don't want the text to start on a new page. When I insert the "Continuous Section Break," however, Word inserts a new page. I understood from another user's comment that this has something to do with how Word deals with footnotes, i.e., it doesn't like footnotes from a previous section to appear on the page with another section, and this could be the cause of my problem. Unfortunately, my "patch" fix is simply to insert the break (continuous) in front of the first word that appears on the page. This is the only way I've been able to avoid the problem. However, if I then insert a new paragraph at the beginning of the doc, for example, it really screws up the formatting. Any suggestions? This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading? What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need [quoted text clipped - 19 lines] Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? -- Message posted via OfficeKB.com http://www.officekb.com/Uwe/Forums.a...ayout/200907/1 |
#6
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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Continuous section break adds new page...
Did you read the StyleRef article? This clearly shows how you can capture
your Cats, Dogs, and Birds without the need for Section Breaks. Using functions like StyleRef means that to get different Headers and/or different Footers you DON'T need a section break. Continuous Section breaks will not achieve what you are after anyway. So long as you place a StyleRef field asigned to the appropriate style (for Cat, Dog,and Bird) in to the Odd Page Header, then these will appear and change in the Header of the page that sub-section starts/changes. Hopefully because you wont need continuous section breaks, you wont have the footnote bug you noticed. On the style for Cat, Dog, Bird do you have "Page Break Before" as an attribute? This will ensure at least that they always start on a new page, not necessarily Odd page though. Hope this helps DeanH "trj27" wrote: Pam, Thanks for your response, but I don't believe you've understood the problem because your solution doesn't work for me. I have different subsections in my chapter and I want the heading for each subsection in the header. This is not just the difference between even and odd pages. All the even pages are the same. That part's easy. But, the odd pages are almost all different. Maybe I just haven't understood your suggestion properly. I thought the only way to get the headers to be different like that was to use section breaks. Anyway, thanks for trying to help! "Pamelia Caswell via OfficeKB.com" wrote: As far as I know there's no fix for the footnote-section break problem. Fortunately, you don't need it, and you don't need nearly so many section breaks because you can use regular page breaks (or include "page break before" in style settings) when necessary. Use odd an even headers and one style ref for the odd pages and another for the even. See http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/HeaderFooter.htm and http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/StyleRef.htm for more information. Pam trj27 wrote: Thanks for your reply! The fix re the footnote compatibility option was a suggestion I read on another community page on this web site. I'm running Word 2007 (12.0.6504.5000) SP2 MSO (12.0.6425.1000). I have XP Professional 5.6.2600 SP3 Build 2600. I'm trying to use continuous section breaks so that I can alter the header information on various pages. For example, my chapter has three major headings (hypothetically) A. Cats; B. Dogs; C. Birds. On every even page, I want the header to Read: "Chapter 1." On every odd, page, I want the appropriate subsection heading (either A, B, or C) to appear in the header. I thoiught the way to do that was to do a section break, but I don't want the text to start on a new page. When I insert the "Continuous Section Break," however, Word inserts a new page. I understood from another user's comment that this has something to do with how Word deals with footnotes, i.e., it doesn't like footnotes from a previous section to appear on the page with another section, and this could be the cause of my problem. Unfortunately, my "patch" fix is simply to insert the break (continuous) in front of the first word that appears on the page. This is the only way I've been able to avoid the problem. However, if I then insert a new paragraph at the beginning of the doc, for example, it really screws up the formatting. Any suggestions? This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading? What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need [quoted text clipped - 19 lines] Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? -- Message posted via OfficeKB.com http://www.officekb.com/Uwe/Forums.a...ayout/200907/1 |
#7
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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Continuous section break adds new page...
Dean and Pam have given you the answers. Continuous section breaks will not
do what you need anyway. You would have to insert Section Break Next Page at the end of the previous page and not a continuous break at the top of the new page to make a new header. But that is totally unnecessary and Suzanne's Tutorial gives all the information you need. The combination of StyleRef in the Header with different First/Odd/Even pages will do all that you need without resource to section breaks. Terry "trj27" wrote in message ... Thanks for your reply! The fix re the footnote compatibility option was a suggestion I read on another community page on this web site. I'm running Word 2007 (12.0.6504.5000) SP2 MSO (12.0.6425.1000). I have XP Professional 5.6.2600 SP3 Build 2600. I'm trying to use continuous section breaks so that I can alter the header information on various pages. For example, my chapter has three major headings (hypothetically) A. Cats; B. Dogs; C. Birds. On every even page, I want the header to Read: "Chapter 1." On every odd, page, I want the appropriate subsection heading (either A, B, or C) to appear in the header. I thoiught the way to do that was to do a section break, but I don't want the text to start on a new page. When I insert the "Continuous Section Break," however, Word inserts a new page. I understood from another user's comment that this has something to do with how Word deals with footnotes, i.e., it doesn't like footnotes from a previous section to appear on the page with another section, and this could be the cause of my problem. Unfortunately, my "patch" fix is simply to insert the break (continuous) in front of the first word that appears on the page. This is the only way I've been able to avoid the problem. However, if I then insert a new paragraph at the beginning of the doc, for example, it really screws up the formatting. Any suggestions? "Terry Farrell" wrote: This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading? What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need for the section breaks? Please explain what you are trying to achieve, Also which version of Word and OS and are they fully patched up to date? -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "trj27" wrote in message ... A chapter in the book I'm writing has subheadings which need to be continuous page breaks. When I insert a continuous page break, Word inserts a new page. I tried changing the settings in "Word Options" to "Lay out footnotes like Word 6.x", but that only made the problem worse. The only way I've managed to fix the problem is to insert the continuous section break in front of the first word at the top of the page. The problem is that if I further edit the document and insert earlier material, it moves all of the information following the continuous section break to a new page. This creates split paragraphs. Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? |
#8
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Continuous section break adds new page...
Yes, I see how Dean and Pam were right! Thanks, everyone!!
I still haven't overcome one issue, though. In my "Heading 1" style, which I insert into the header, it is autoformatted in the doc and includes the outline letter of the section, i.e., "A. Dogs", "B. Cats", "C. Birds", etc. When I use the StyleRef, It only includes "Dogs", "Cats", "Birds", etc. I've tried all the switches, but they don't solve the issue. For example, when I tell the field code to insert the paragraph number, it ONLY inserts "A" "B" or "C". None of the switch options I see make it insert both the paragraph number AND the actual title (Heading 1). Thanks for your help with this! "Terry Farrell" wrote: Dean and Pam have given you the answers. Continuous section breaks will not do what you need anyway. You would have to insert Section Break Next Page at the end of the previous page and not a continuous break at the top of the new page to make a new header. But that is totally unnecessary and Suzanne's Tutorial gives all the information you need. The combination of StyleRef in the Header with different First/Odd/Even pages will do all that you need without resource to section breaks. Terry "trj27" wrote in message ... Thanks for your reply! The fix re the footnote compatibility option was a suggestion I read on another community page on this web site. I'm running Word 2007 (12.0.6504.5000) SP2 MSO (12.0.6425.1000). I have XP Professional 5.6.2600 SP3 Build 2600. I'm trying to use continuous section breaks so that I can alter the header information on various pages. For example, my chapter has three major headings (hypothetically) A. Cats; B. Dogs; C. Birds. On every even page, I want the header to Read: "Chapter 1." On every odd, page, I want the appropriate subsection heading (either A, B, or C) to appear in the header. I thoiught the way to do that was to do a section break, but I don't want the text to start on a new page. When I insert the "Continuous Section Break," however, Word inserts a new page. I understood from another user's comment that this has something to do with how Word deals with footnotes, i.e., it doesn't like footnotes from a previous section to appear on the page with another section, and this could be the cause of my problem. Unfortunately, my "patch" fix is simply to insert the break (continuous) in front of the first word that appears on the page. This is the only way I've been able to avoid the problem. However, if I then insert a new paragraph at the beginning of the doc, for example, it really screws up the formatting. Any suggestions? "Terry Farrell" wrote: This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading? What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need for the section breaks? Please explain what you are trying to achieve, Also which version of Word and OS and are they fully patched up to date? -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "trj27" wrote in message ... A chapter in the book I'm writing has subheadings which need to be continuous page breaks. When I insert a continuous page break, Word inserts a new page. I tried changing the settings in "Word Options" to "Lay out footnotes like Word 6.x", but that only made the problem worse. The only way I've managed to fix the problem is to insert the continuous section break in front of the first word at the top of the page. The problem is that if I further edit the document and insert earlier material, it moves all of the information following the continuous section break to a new page. This creates split paragraphs. Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? |
#9
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Continuous section break adds new page...
The \n switch should include the A. or B. proving they are inserted as part
of the Outline Heading Numbering and are not manually created. Terry "trj27" wrote in message ... Yes, I see how Dean and Pam were right! Thanks, everyone!! I still haven't overcome one issue, though. In my "Heading 1" style, which I insert into the header, it is autoformatted in the doc and includes the outline letter of the section, i.e., "A. Dogs", "B. Cats", "C. Birds", etc. When I use the StyleRef, It only includes "Dogs", "Cats", "Birds", etc. I've tried all the switches, but they don't solve the issue. For example, when I tell the field code to insert the paragraph number, it ONLY inserts "A" "B" or "C". None of the switch options I see make it insert both the paragraph number AND the actual title (Heading 1). Thanks for your help with this! "Terry Farrell" wrote: Dean and Pam have given you the answers. Continuous section breaks will not do what you need anyway. You would have to insert Section Break Next Page at the end of the previous page and not a continuous break at the top of the new page to make a new header. But that is totally unnecessary and Suzanne's Tutorial gives all the information you need. The combination of StyleRef in the Header with different First/Odd/Even pages will do all that you need without resource to section breaks. Terry "trj27" wrote in message ... Thanks for your reply! The fix re the footnote compatibility option was a suggestion I read on another community page on this web site. I'm running Word 2007 (12.0.6504.5000) SP2 MSO (12.0.6425.1000). I have XP Professional 5.6.2600 SP3 Build 2600. I'm trying to use continuous section breaks so that I can alter the header information on various pages. For example, my chapter has three major headings (hypothetically) A. Cats; B. Dogs; C. Birds. On every even page, I want the header to Read: "Chapter 1." On every odd, page, I want the appropriate subsection heading (either A, B, or C) to appear in the header. I thoiught the way to do that was to do a section break, but I don't want the text to start on a new page. When I insert the "Continuous Section Break," however, Word inserts a new page. I understood from another user's comment that this has something to do with how Word deals with footnotes, i.e., it doesn't like footnotes from a previous section to appear on the page with another section, and this could be the cause of my problem. Unfortunately, my "patch" fix is simply to insert the break (continuous) in front of the first word that appears on the page. This is the only way I've been able to avoid the problem. However, if I then insert a new paragraph at the beginning of the doc, for example, it really screws up the formatting. Any suggestions? "Terry Farrell" wrote: This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading? What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need for the section breaks? Please explain what you are trying to achieve, Also which version of Word and OS and are they fully patched up to date? -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "trj27" wrote in message ... A chapter in the book I'm writing has subheadings which need to be continuous page breaks. When I insert a continuous page break, Word inserts a new page. I tried changing the settings in "Word Options" to "Lay out footnotes like Word 6.x", but that only made the problem worse. The only way I've managed to fix the problem is to insert the continuous section break in front of the first word at the top of the page. The problem is that if I further edit the document and insert earlier material, it moves all of the information following the continuous section break to a new page. This creates split paragraphs. Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? |
#10
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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Continuous section break adds new page...
That's what I thought, but it doesn't. When I include the \n switch, it only
places the letter of Heading 1 in the header. I did not manually create the outline numbering. It is autoformatted text. Thanks for your help! "Terry Farrell" wrote: The \n switch should include the A. or B. proving they are inserted as part of the Outline Heading Numbering and are not manually created. Terry "trj27" wrote in message ... Yes, I see how Dean and Pam were right! Thanks, everyone!! I still haven't overcome one issue, though. In my "Heading 1" style, which I insert into the header, it is autoformatted in the doc and includes the outline letter of the section, i.e., "A. Dogs", "B. Cats", "C. Birds", etc. When I use the StyleRef, It only includes "Dogs", "Cats", "Birds", etc. I've tried all the switches, but they don't solve the issue. For example, when I tell the field code to insert the paragraph number, it ONLY inserts "A" "B" or "C". None of the switch options I see make it insert both the paragraph number AND the actual title (Heading 1). Thanks for your help with this! "Terry Farrell" wrote: Dean and Pam have given you the answers. Continuous section breaks will not do what you need anyway. You would have to insert Section Break Next Page at the end of the previous page and not a continuous break at the top of the new page to make a new header. But that is totally unnecessary and Suzanne's Tutorial gives all the information you need. The combination of StyleRef in the Header with different First/Odd/Even pages will do all that you need without resource to section breaks. Terry "trj27" wrote in message ... Thanks for your reply! The fix re the footnote compatibility option was a suggestion I read on another community page on this web site. I'm running Word 2007 (12.0.6504.5000) SP2 MSO (12.0.6425.1000). I have XP Professional 5.6.2600 SP3 Build 2600. I'm trying to use continuous section breaks so that I can alter the header information on various pages. For example, my chapter has three major headings (hypothetically) A. Cats; B. Dogs; C. Birds. On every even page, I want the header to Read: "Chapter 1." On every odd, page, I want the appropriate subsection heading (either A, B, or C) to appear in the header. I thoiught the way to do that was to do a section break, but I don't want the text to start on a new page. When I insert the "Continuous Section Break," however, Word inserts a new page. I understood from another user's comment that this has something to do with how Word deals with footnotes, i.e., it doesn't like footnotes from a previous section to appear on the page with another section, and this could be the cause of my problem. Unfortunately, my "patch" fix is simply to insert the break (continuous) in front of the first word that appears on the page. This is the only way I've been able to avoid the problem. However, if I then insert a new paragraph at the beginning of the doc, for example, it really screws up the formatting. Any suggestions? "Terry Farrell" wrote: This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading? What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need for the section breaks? Please explain what you are trying to achieve, Also which version of Word and OS and are they fully patched up to date? -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "trj27" wrote in message ... A chapter in the book I'm writing has subheadings which need to be continuous page breaks. When I insert a continuous page break, Word inserts a new page. I tried changing the settings in "Word Options" to "Lay out footnotes like Word 6.x", but that only made the problem worse. The only way I've managed to fix the problem is to insert the continuous section break in front of the first word at the top of the page. The problem is that if I further edit the document and insert earlier material, it moves all of the information following the continuous section break to a new page. This creates split paragraphs. Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? |
#11
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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Continuous section break adds new page...
To have both the "number" and the text with StyleRef you will need two
StyleRef fields, one for the Number, with /n, and one for the text, no switch. Dont forget to manually enter a space or whatever you want between the fields. Hope this helps DeanH "trj27" wrote: That's what I thought, but it doesn't. When I include the \n switch, it only places the letter of Heading 1 in the header. I did not manually create the outline numbering. It is autoformatted text. Thanks for your help! "Terry Farrell" wrote: The \n switch should include the A. or B. proving they are inserted as part of the Outline Heading Numbering and are not manually created. Terry "trj27" wrote in message ... Yes, I see how Dean and Pam were right! Thanks, everyone!! I still haven't overcome one issue, though. In my "Heading 1" style, which I insert into the header, it is autoformatted in the doc and includes the outline letter of the section, i.e., "A. Dogs", "B. Cats", "C. Birds", etc. When I use the StyleRef, It only includes "Dogs", "Cats", "Birds", etc. I've tried all the switches, but they don't solve the issue. For example, when I tell the field code to insert the paragraph number, it ONLY inserts "A" "B" or "C". None of the switch options I see make it insert both the paragraph number AND the actual title (Heading 1). Thanks for your help with this! "Terry Farrell" wrote: Dean and Pam have given you the answers. Continuous section breaks will not do what you need anyway. You would have to insert Section Break Next Page at the end of the previous page and not a continuous break at the top of the new page to make a new header. But that is totally unnecessary and Suzanne's Tutorial gives all the information you need. The combination of StyleRef in the Header with different First/Odd/Even pages will do all that you need without resource to section breaks. Terry "trj27" wrote in message ... Thanks for your reply! The fix re the footnote compatibility option was a suggestion I read on another community page on this web site. I'm running Word 2007 (12.0.6504.5000) SP2 MSO (12.0.6425.1000). I have XP Professional 5.6.2600 SP3 Build 2600. I'm trying to use continuous section breaks so that I can alter the header information on various pages. For example, my chapter has three major headings (hypothetically) A. Cats; B. Dogs; C. Birds. On every even page, I want the header to Read: "Chapter 1." On every odd, page, I want the appropriate subsection heading (either A, B, or C) to appear in the header. I thoiught the way to do that was to do a section break, but I don't want the text to start on a new page. When I insert the "Continuous Section Break," however, Word inserts a new page. I understood from another user's comment that this has something to do with how Word deals with footnotes, i.e., it doesn't like footnotes from a previous section to appear on the page with another section, and this could be the cause of my problem. Unfortunately, my "patch" fix is simply to insert the break (continuous) in front of the first word that appears on the page. This is the only way I've been able to avoid the problem. However, if I then insert a new paragraph at the beginning of the doc, for example, it really screws up the formatting. Any suggestions? "Terry Farrell" wrote: This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading? What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need for the section breaks? Please explain what you are trying to achieve, Also which version of Word and OS and are they fully patched up to date? -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "trj27" wrote in message ... A chapter in the book I'm writing has subheadings which need to be continuous page breaks. When I insert a continuous page break, Word inserts a new page. I tried changing the settings in "Word Options" to "Lay out footnotes like Word 6.x", but that only made the problem worse. The only way I've managed to fix the problem is to insert the continuous section break in front of the first word at the top of the page. The problem is that if I further edit the document and insert earlier material, it moves all of the information following the continuous section break to a new page. This creates split paragraphs. Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? |
#12
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Continuous section break adds new page...
Hi,
I googled a formating problem I am having in Word 2007 (Vista Biz) and this thread came up and I'm hoping it is still alive. I'm not trying to do anything too complicate but lately, in a large & growing thesis document, when I attempt to insert a Continous Section Break or attempt to make columns in a page, it inserts a page break instead. The same thing happen a few days ago and a reboot of the computer seemed to do the trick but not this time. Any thoughts? David "Terry Farrell" wrote: This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading? What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need for the section breaks? Please explain what you are trying to achieve, Also which version of Word and OS and are they fully patched up to date? -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "trj27" wrote in message ... A chapter in the book I'm writing has subheadings which need to be continuous page breaks. When I insert a continuous page break, Word inserts a new page. I tried changing the settings in "Word Options" to "Lay out footnotes like Word 6.x", but that only made the problem worse. The only way I've managed to fix the problem is to insert the continuous section break in front of the first word at the top of the page. The problem is that if I further edit the document and insert earlier material, it moves all of the information following the continuous section break to a new page. This creates split paragraphs. Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? |
#13
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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Continuous section break adds new page...
Are you sure that Word is actually inserting a *page* break, and not a *next
page* section break? You can usually work around this by changing the type of section after the break has been inserted. To do that, on the Page Layout tab, click the dialog launcher (the arrow on the bottom right) of the Page Setup group. On the Layout tab, change "Section start" to "Continuous." -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "DGW" wrote in message ... Hi, I googled a formating problem I am having in Word 2007 (Vista Biz) and this thread came up and I'm hoping it is still alive. I'm not trying to do anything too complicate but lately, in a large & growing thesis document, when I attempt to insert a Continous Section Break or attempt to make columns in a page, it inserts a page break instead. The same thing happen a few days ago and a reboot of the computer seemed to do the trick but not this time. Any thoughts? David "Terry Farrell" wrote: This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading? What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need for the section breaks? Please explain what you are trying to achieve, Also which version of Word and OS and are they fully patched up to date? -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "trj27" wrote in message ... A chapter in the book I'm writing has subheadings which need to be continuous page breaks. When I insert a continuous page break, Word inserts a new page. I tried changing the settings in "Word Options" to "Lay out footnotes like Word 6.x", but that only made the problem worse. The only way I've managed to fix the problem is to insert the continuous section break in front of the first word at the top of the page. The problem is that if I further edit the document and insert earlier material, it moves all of the information following the continuous section break to a new page. This creates split paragraphs. Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? |
#14
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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Continuous section break adds new page...
See €śSection break causes an unexpected page break in Word€ť at
http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=292074 for an explanation and http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting...panColumns.htm for a workaround. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "DGW" wrote in message ... Hi, I googled a formating problem I am having in Word 2007 (Vista Biz) and this thread came up and I'm hoping it is still alive. I'm not trying to do anything too complicate but lately, in a large & growing thesis document, when I attempt to insert a Continous Section Break or attempt to make columns in a page, it inserts a page break instead. The same thing happen a few days ago and a reboot of the computer seemed to do the trick but not this time. Any thoughts? David "Terry Farrell" wrote: This sounds weird. Why do you need a section break before a sub-heading? What has an obscure Footnote compatibility option got to do with the need for the section breaks? Please explain what you are trying to achieve, Also which version of Word and OS and are they fully patched up to date? -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "trj27" wrote in message ... A chapter in the book I'm writing has subheadings which need to be continuous page breaks. When I insert a continuous page break, Word inserts a new page. I tried changing the settings in "Word Options" to "Lay out footnotes like Word 6.x", but that only made the problem worse. The only way I've managed to fix the problem is to insert the continuous section break in front of the first word at the top of the page. The problem is that if I further edit the document and insert earlier material, it moves all of the information following the continuous section break to a new page. This creates split paragraphs. Does anyone know a more reasonable solution to this problem? |
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