Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
Insert Break in Level of Outline Numbering
I'm trying to have my first level looking something like:
Section 1 (break) Text Here I am only able to get something like: Section 1 (tab) Text Here Is this possible? Also, what's the difference between the paragraph and tab formatting of Heading1 versus the Level tab formatting of Level 1? Thanks. |
#2
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
Insert Break in Level of Outline Numbering
"Brandon" wrote in message
... I'm trying to have my first level looking something like: Section 1 (break) Text Here I am only able to get something like: Section 1 (tab) Text Here Is this possible? You can't include a page break with the numbering. Instead, you can use two styles: one for the "Section 1" part and one for the "Text here" part. Include the relevant one in your table of contents (if you need one). Also, what's the difference between the paragraph and tab formatting of Heading1 versus the Level tab formatting of Level 1? Thanks. There should be no difference (except for the obvious: a numbering scheme requires only one tab stop, for example, whereas a paragraph can have several), but, in practice, it's safer to set the indentation and text position (which includes a tab stop as well) in the numbering options. In some versions of Word it is absolutely crucial to do so. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP |
#3
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
Insert Break in Level of Outline Numbering
You can't include a page break with the numbering.
Correction: Although this is a true statement, I (obviously) meant to write *paragraph* break. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Stefan Blom" wrote in message ... "Brandon" wrote in message ... I'm trying to have my first level looking something like: Section 1 (break) Text Here I am only able to get something like: Section 1 (tab) Text Here Is this possible? You can't include a page break with the numbering. Instead, you can use two styles: one for the "Section 1" part and one for the "Text here" part. Include the relevant one in your table of contents (if you need one). Also, what's the difference between the paragraph and tab formatting of Heading1 versus the Level tab formatting of Level 1? Thanks. There should be no difference (except for the obvious: a numbering scheme requires only one tab stop, for example, whereas a paragraph can have several), but, in practice, it's safer to set the indentation and text position (which includes a tab stop as well) in the numbering options. In some versions of Word it is absolutely crucial to do so. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP |
#4
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
Insert Break in Level of Outline Numbering
I did this and it looks nice. I'm not sure it's entirely user friendly in a
template though. If the user creates a Heading 1 and forgets to create the secondary style, which I called SubHeading 1, it will look quite ugly I did force it to use SubHeading1 as Heading 1's following paragraph style though. "Stefan Blom" wrote: "Brandon" wrote in message ... I'm trying to have my first level looking something like: Section 1 (break) Text Here I am only able to get something like: Section 1 (tab) Text Here Is this possible? You can't include a page break with the numbering. Instead, you can use two styles: one for the "Section 1" part and one for the "Text here" part. Include the relevant one in your table of contents (if you need one). Also, what's the difference between the paragraph and tab formatting of Heading1 versus the Level tab formatting of Level 1? Thanks. There should be no difference (except for the obvious: a numbering scheme requires only one tab stop, for example, whereas a paragraph can have several), but, in practice, it's safer to set the indentation and text position (which includes a tab stop as well) in the numbering options. In some versions of Word it is absolutely crucial to do so. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP |
#5
Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
|
|||
|
|||
Insert Break in Level of Outline Numbering
Setting the "Style for following paragraph" helps a lot.
Beyond that, I guess you would have to teach the users how to properly make use of templates. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP "Brandon" wrote in message ... I did this and it looks nice. I'm not sure it's entirely user friendly in a template though. If the user creates a Heading 1 and forgets to create the secondary style, which I called SubHeading 1, it will look quite ugly I did force it to use SubHeading1 as Heading 1's following paragraph style though. "Stefan Blom" wrote: "Brandon" wrote in message ... I'm trying to have my first level looking something like: Section 1 (break) Text Here I am only able to get something like: Section 1 (tab) Text Here Is this possible? You can't include a page break with the numbering. Instead, you can use two styles: one for the "Section 1" part and one for the "Text here" part. Include the relevant one in your table of contents (if you need one). Also, what's the difference between the paragraph and tab formatting of Heading1 versus the Level tab formatting of Level 1? Thanks. There should be no difference (except for the obvious: a numbering scheme requires only one tab stop, for example, whereas a paragraph can have several), but, in practice, it's safer to set the indentation and text position (which includes a tab stop as well) in the numbering options. In some versions of Word it is absolutely crucial to do so. -- Stefan Blom Microsoft Word MVP |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
How to Print an outline just to a certain level in MSWord Outline | Microsoft Word Help | |||
Outline View - Outline Level pulldown does not format text | Page Layout | |||
Outline Number Level 3 not restarting numbering. | Page Layout | |||
Auto update ref to outline level within outline | Microsoft Word Help | |||
How do I get proper numbering level in outline numbering | Microsoft Word Help |