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#1
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I know that I can add a bookmark and then add a cross reference to
that bookmark. However, if a bookmark cannot contain spaces or certain characters, then the cross reference to it is essentially useless. Are there workarounds? How do you effectively cross reference the text of an unnumbered paragraph or heading without doing_this_to_the_designated_paragraph OrTakingThisLovelyApproach or trying_something_retro_like_this? There must be a workaround for this...? How do people manage large documents where they must link to things like hyphenated or multi-word definitions or citations that contain a word--the author's name, say-- and the publication year? I'm using Word 2007, but I have access to Word 2010 in case there is a more accessible workaround available in that version. |
#2
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A bookmark is just a name, and it's a name that isn't necessarily seen by
the user; it doesn't have to replicate the bookmarked text but can be a title or summary of it. If the point of the cross-reference is to be a link, then why not insert a hyperlink to the bookmark? The hyperlink's display text can be anything you like. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "yoshi.mitsou" wrote in message ... I know that I can add a bookmark and then add a cross reference to that bookmark. However, if a bookmark cannot contain spaces or certain characters, then the cross reference to it is essentially useless. Are there workarounds? How do you effectively cross reference the text of an unnumbered paragraph or heading without doing_this_to_the_designated_paragraph OrTakingThisLovelyApproach or trying_something_retro_like_this? There must be a workaround for this...? How do people manage large documents where they must link to things like hyphenated or multi-word definitions or citations that contain a word--the author's name, say-- and the publication year? I'm using Word 2007, but I have access to Word 2010 in case there is a more accessible workaround available in that version. |
#3
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I just returned back here to post this very explanation. It dawned on
me this morning after talking with a colleague that I was doing exactly the wrong thing in my approach--I wasn't understanding the tool fully. I use a different word processor often, and it handles its equivalent of bookmarks and cross references differently. Applying that tool's approach to a Word document wound up confusing me. Things improved once I realized that the bookmark title is just a designation and not the text that will be reflected in the x-ref. It also helped to realize that I have to select the entire phrase that will appear as the cross-reference and then apply the bookmark to that phrase. In the other word processor that I use, you can simply add its equivalent of a bookmark to a space anywhere in the paragraph that you wish to cross reference and it'll do the right thing. Doing that in Word yields an empty x-ref...one more thing that compounded my confusion. All is well now. THanks, Suzanne, for the help. |
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