Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
Table of Contents and Index
I work for a large state agency and our Personnel Manual is in Word 2003. We
began the manual about 10 years ago in the version of Word available then. For a while, we could update the Table of Contents automatically whenever we made changes to the manual. At some point, the update feature stopped working. We contacted Microsoft and were told our manual had become too complicated, with too many sections and subsections and we had exceeded the capabilities of the software. Since then, we have been manually updating the TOC and Index. This has become very cumbersome. We like having the manual in Word for a number of reasons. Our plan is to completely retype the manual and try to have the automatic updates work the way they were designed. Before taking this on, we would like to know what kind of limitations are in Word 2003 for doing this. What are the limite for, say, the number of Chapters, sections, subsections, etc? Any advice would be appreciated. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Highlighted Table of contents and index | Tables | |||
Table of Contents - Inserting Index | Microsoft Word Help | |||
Create an Index with Links - same as Table of Contents | Microsoft Word Help | |||
internal code for index or table of contents | New Users | |||
internal code for index or table of contents | Tables |