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#1
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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TOC help, please?
I've never used a TOC before, and probably wouldn't now if it hadn't already
been in the document I was given to work on. As I've added sections and adjusted things, I've Updated Entire Table (this is in Word XP, by the way). Now it overflows onto the next page. I can't seem to adjust the line spacing, and I can't seem to break this so I can put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page - the next Update clears it out. Any suggestions are welcome. Ed |
#2
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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TOC help, please?
Hi Ed,
The TOC is actually just one field (right-click it and choose Toggle Field Codes to see that), so updating it is always going to remove any direct changes you make inside it. One way to get what you want is to wait until the document is completely finished, update the TOC one last time, and then unlink the TOC field (select it and Ctrl+Shift+F9) to change it into plain text. Now you can format and alter it all you want, but you can't update it again unless you delete all that text and insert a new TOC field. My preferred solution is not to put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page at all; if the reader can't see that it's a TOC, maybe they should "step away from the book so no one gets hurt". :-) At most, I'd make the TOC a section of its own and put "Table of Contents" in the header of that section -- see http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting...rontMatter.htm. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. Ed wrote: I've never used a TOC before, and probably wouldn't now if it hadn't already been in the document I was given to work on. As I've added sections and adjusted things, I've Updated Entire Table (this is in Word XP, by the way). Now it overflows onto the next page. I can't seem to adjust the line spacing, and I can't seem to break this so I can put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page - the next Update clears it out. Any suggestions are welcome. Ed |
#3
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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TOC help, please?
Hi, Jay.
As a matter of fact, the TOC is already in its own section. So I adjusted the header and footer dimensions to break the list in an appropriate place and set my TOC column headings in the header. Then I tried to add an IF filed after "TABLE OF CONTENTS" and things got real screwy! I tried to insert: {IF {PAGE}1 "(continued)" ""} (braces entered with Ctrl+F9), but got the result: Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional. I thought I was going by the Help file syntax, but obviously Word doesn't agree! Any help? Ed "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Hi Ed, The TOC is actually just one field (right-click it and choose Toggle Field Codes to see that), so updating it is always going to remove any direct changes you make inside it. One way to get what you want is to wait until the document is completely finished, update the TOC one last time, and then unlink the TOC field (select it and Ctrl+Shift+F9) to change it into plain text. Now you can format and alter it all you want, but you can't update it again unless you delete all that text and insert a new TOC field. My preferred solution is not to put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page at all; if the reader can't see that it's a TOC, maybe they should "step away from the book so no one gets hurt". :-) At most, I'd make the TOC a section of its own and put "Table of Contents" in the header of that section -- see http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting...rontMatter.htm. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. Ed wrote: I've never used a TOC before, and probably wouldn't now if it hadn't already been in the document I was given to work on. As I've added sections and adjusted things, I've Updated Entire Table (this is in Word XP, by the way). Now it overflows onto the next page. I can't seem to adjust the line spacing, and I can't seem to break this so I can put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page - the next Update clears it out. Any suggestions are welcome. Ed |
#4
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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TOC help, please?
I solved the problem by using a Different First Page header, and putting
"Continued" in the second page header. I'd still like to know what I did wrong with that IF field, though, if you can see anything. Ed "Ed" wrote in message ... Hi, Jay. As a matter of fact, the TOC is already in its own section. So I adjusted the header and footer dimensions to break the list in an appropriate place and set my TOC column headings in the header. Then I tried to add an IF filed after "TABLE OF CONTENTS" and things got real screwy! I tried to insert: {IF {PAGE}1 "(continued)" ""} (braces entered with Ctrl+F9), but got the result: Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional. I thought I was going by the Help file syntax, but obviously Word doesn't agree! Any help? Ed "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Hi Ed, The TOC is actually just one field (right-click it and choose Toggle Field Codes to see that), so updating it is always going to remove any direct changes you make inside it. One way to get what you want is to wait until the document is completely finished, update the TOC one last time, and then unlink the TOC field (select it and Ctrl+Shift+F9) to change it into plain text. Now you can format and alter it all you want, but you can't update it again unless you delete all that text and insert a new TOC field. My preferred solution is not to put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page at all; if the reader can't see that it's a TOC, maybe they should "step away from the book so no one gets hurt". :-) At most, I'd make the TOC a section of its own and put "Table of Contents" in the header of that section -- see http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting...rontMatter.htm. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. Ed wrote: I've never used a TOC before, and probably wouldn't now if it hadn't already been in the document I was given to work on. As I've added sections and adjusted things, I've Updated Entire Table (this is in Word XP, by the way). Now it overflows onto the next page. I can't seem to adjust the line spacing, and I can't seem to break this so I can put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page - the next Update clears it out. Any suggestions are welcome. Ed |
#5
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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TOC help, please?
It's one of those screwy things you learn to look for... you need a space
before and after the greater-than sign. I don't know why it's so picky. The Different First Page solution is, if not "better", at least more reliable. Jay Ed wrote: I solved the problem by using a Different First Page header, and putting "Continued" in the second page header. I'd still like to know what I did wrong with that IF field, though, if you can see anything. Ed "Ed" wrote in message ... Hi, Jay. As a matter of fact, the TOC is already in its own section. So I adjusted the header and footer dimensions to break the list in an appropriate place and set my TOC column headings in the header. Then I tried to add an IF filed after "TABLE OF CONTENTS" and things got real screwy! I tried to insert: {IF {PAGE}1 "(continued)" ""} (braces entered with Ctrl+F9), but got the result: Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional. I thought I was going by the Help file syntax, but obviously Word doesn't agree! Any help? Ed "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Hi Ed, The TOC is actually just one field (right-click it and choose Toggle Field Codes to see that), so updating it is always going to remove any direct changes you make inside it. One way to get what you want is to wait until the document is completely finished, update the TOC one last time, and then unlink the TOC field (select it and Ctrl+Shift+F9) to change it into plain text. Now you can format and alter it all you want, but you can't update it again unless you delete all that text and insert a new TOC field. My preferred solution is not to put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page at all; if the reader can't see that it's a TOC, maybe they should "step away from the book so no one gets hurt". :-) At most, I'd make the TOC a section of its own and put "Table of Contents" in the header of that section -- see http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting...rontMatter.htm. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. Ed wrote: I've never used a TOC before, and probably wouldn't now if it hadn't already been in the document I was given to work on. As I've added sections and adjusted things, I've Updated Entire Table (this is in Word XP, by the way). Now it overflows onto the next page. I can't seem to adjust the line spacing, and I can't seem to break this so I can put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page - the next Update clears it out. Any suggestions are welcome. Ed |
#6
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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TOC help, please?
It's one of those screwy things you learn to look for... you need a space
before and after the greater-than sign. I don't know why it's so picky. Okay - it worked. Let's file that one away, right alongside the time I learned about left-hand threading by spending 2 hours trying to get a bolt off the car! Thanks once again, Jay. Ed "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... It's one of those screwy things you learn to look for... you need a space before and after the greater-than sign. I don't know why it's so picky. The Different First Page solution is, if not "better", at least more reliable. Jay Ed wrote: I solved the problem by using a Different First Page header, and putting "Continued" in the second page header. I'd still like to know what I did wrong with that IF field, though, if you can see anything. Ed "Ed" wrote in message ... Hi, Jay. As a matter of fact, the TOC is already in its own section. So I adjusted the header and footer dimensions to break the list in an appropriate place and set my TOC column headings in the header. Then I tried to add an IF filed after "TABLE OF CONTENTS" and things got real screwy! I tried to insert: {IF {PAGE}1 "(continued)" ""} (braces entered with Ctrl+F9), but got the result: Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional. I thought I was going by the Help file syntax, but obviously Word doesn't agree! Any help? Ed "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Hi Ed, The TOC is actually just one field (right-click it and choose Toggle Field Codes to see that), so updating it is always going to remove any direct changes you make inside it. One way to get what you want is to wait until the document is completely finished, update the TOC one last time, and then unlink the TOC field (select it and Ctrl+Shift+F9) to change it into plain text. Now you can format and alter it all you want, but you can't update it again unless you delete all that text and insert a new TOC field. My preferred solution is not to put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page at all; if the reader can't see that it's a TOC, maybe they should "step away from the book so no one gets hurt". :-) At most, I'd make the TOC a section of its own and put "Table of Contents" in the header of that section -- see http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting...rontMatter.htm. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. Ed wrote: I've never used a TOC before, and probably wouldn't now if it hadn't already been in the document I was given to work on. As I've added sections and adjusted things, I've Updated Entire Table (this is in Word XP, by the way). Now it overflows onto the next page. I can't seem to adjust the line spacing, and I can't seem to break this so I can put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page - the next Update clears it out. Any suggestions are welcome. Ed |
#7
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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TOC help, please?
The only thing I've ever had to remove that was reverse-threaded was one of
those plastic caps that hold fan blades on. Because the fan blade turns counter-clockwise (presumably as a result of something mechanical to do with the motor), the (as it were) nut has to be turned clockwise to remove it. Rather hard to get your head around after having spent 50 years or so with righty-tighty, lefty-loosy. g -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Ed" wrote in message ... It's one of those screwy things you learn to look for... you need a space before and after the greater-than sign. I don't know why it's so picky. Okay - it worked. Let's file that one away, right alongside the time I learned about left-hand threading by spending 2 hours trying to get a bolt off the car! Thanks once again, Jay. Ed "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... It's one of those screwy things you learn to look for... you need a space before and after the greater-than sign. I don't know why it's so picky. The Different First Page solution is, if not "better", at least more reliable. Jay Ed wrote: I solved the problem by using a Different First Page header, and putting "Continued" in the second page header. I'd still like to know what I did wrong with that IF field, though, if you can see anything. Ed "Ed" wrote in message ... Hi, Jay. As a matter of fact, the TOC is already in its own section. So I adjusted the header and footer dimensions to break the list in an appropriate place and set my TOC column headings in the header. Then I tried to add an IF filed after "TABLE OF CONTENTS" and things got real screwy! I tried to insert: {IF {PAGE}1 "(continued)" ""} (braces entered with Ctrl+F9), but got the result: Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional. I thought I was going by the Help file syntax, but obviously Word doesn't agree! Any help? Ed "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Hi Ed, The TOC is actually just one field (right-click it and choose Toggle Field Codes to see that), so updating it is always going to remove any direct changes you make inside it. One way to get what you want is to wait until the document is completely finished, update the TOC one last time, and then unlink the TOC field (select it and Ctrl+Shift+F9) to change it into plain text. Now you can format and alter it all you want, but you can't update it again unless you delete all that text and insert a new TOC field. My preferred solution is not to put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page at all; if the reader can't see that it's a TOC, maybe they should "step away from the book so no one gets hurt". :-) At most, I'd make the TOC a section of its own and put "Table of Contents" in the header of that section -- see http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting...rontMatter.htm. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. Ed wrote: I've never used a TOC before, and probably wouldn't now if it hadn't already been in the document I was given to work on. As I've added sections and adjusted things, I've Updated Entire Table (this is in Word XP, by the way). Now it overflows onto the next page. I can't seem to adjust the line spacing, and I can't seem to break this so I can put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page - the next Update clears it out. Any suggestions are welcome. Ed |
#8
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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TOC help, please?
The brake fluid cap on an XJ40 Jag also has a left hand thread, and, from
memory wasn't the pedal bar on a push-bike? "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The only thing I've ever had to remove that was reverse-threaded was one of those plastic caps that hold fan blades on. Because the fan blade turns counter-clockwise (presumably as a result of something mechanical to do with the motor), the (as it were) nut has to be turned clockwise to remove it. Rather hard to get your head around after having spent 50 years or so with righty-tighty, lefty-loosy. g -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Ed" wrote in message ... It's one of those screwy things you learn to look for... you need a space before and after the greater-than sign. I don't know why it's so picky. Okay - it worked. Let's file that one away, right alongside the time I learned about left-hand threading by spending 2 hours trying to get a bolt off the car! Thanks once again, Jay. Ed "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... It's one of those screwy things you learn to look for... you need a space before and after the greater-than sign. I don't know why it's so picky. The Different First Page solution is, if not "better", at least more reliable. Jay Ed wrote: I solved the problem by using a Different First Page header, and putting "Continued" in the second page header. I'd still like to know what I did wrong with that IF field, though, if you can see anything. Ed "Ed" wrote in message ... Hi, Jay. As a matter of fact, the TOC is already in its own section. So I adjusted the header and footer dimensions to break the list in an appropriate place and set my TOC column headings in the header. Then I tried to add an IF filed after "TABLE OF CONTENTS" and things got real screwy! I tried to insert: {IF {PAGE}1 "(continued)" ""} (braces entered with Ctrl+F9), but got the result: Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional.Error! Unknown op code for conditional. I thought I was going by the Help file syntax, but obviously Word doesn't agree! Any help? Ed "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... Hi Ed, The TOC is actually just one field (right-click it and choose Toggle Field Codes to see that), so updating it is always going to remove any direct changes you make inside it. One way to get what you want is to wait until the document is completely finished, update the TOC one last time, and then unlink the TOC field (select it and Ctrl+Shift+F9) to change it into plain text. Now you can format and alter it all you want, but you can't update it again unless you delete all that text and insert a new TOC field. My preferred solution is not to put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page at all; if the reader can't see that it's a TOC, maybe they should "step away from the book so no one gets hurt". :-) At most, I'd make the TOC a section of its own and put "Table of Contents" in the header of that section -- see http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting...rontMatter.htm. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. Ed wrote: I've never used a TOC before, and probably wouldn't now if it hadn't already been in the document I was given to work on. As I've added sections and adjusted things, I've Updated Entire Table (this is in Word XP, by the way). Now it overflows onto the next page. I can't seem to adjust the line spacing, and I can't seem to break this so I can put "Table of Contents (continued)" at the top of the next page - the next Update clears it out. Any suggestions are welcome. Ed |