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#1
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TOC and dot leaders
I have a unique issue with creating Table of Contents. Level 1 in the Table
sometimes has automatic numbering and sometimes does not. Because of the numbering, I need a hanging indent of .5". If I have a heading that is less than .5" in length (4 or less characters) and not numbered, the dot leader is removed and the page number moves to the left 2 characters from the entry. The problem is easily fixed if I remove the hanging indent, but then the entries that are numbered do not line up correctly. Any help in resolving this would be greatly appreciated. |
#2
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Without knowing more about your document structure, it's hard to say, but if
you can use different styles for the headings that have numbers and those that don't, then you can map them to different TOC levels, formatted the same except for the hanging indent. For example, suppose you have two Level 1 heading styles and your TOC includes three levels. You could map one of the Level 1 heading styles to TOC 4 instead and change the formatting of TOC 4 to match TOC 1 except for the hanging indent. -- 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. "kpm" wrote in message ... I have a unique issue with creating Table of Contents. Level 1 in the Table sometimes has automatic numbering and sometimes does not. Because of the numbering, I need a hanging indent of .5". If I have a heading that is less than .5" in length (4 or less characters) and not numbered, the dot leader is removed and the page number moves to the left 2 characters from the entry. The problem is easily fixed if I remove the hanging indent, but then the entries that are numbered do not line up correctly. Any help in resolving this would be greatly appreciated. |
#3
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Thanks, that is a viable workaround. I work for a law firm and it is often
you will see a level 1 heading like "Article I Introduction" which is created using using auto numbering and another level 1 called "Names" or something similar. Using your method I can direct them to use a predesigned level 9 heading with the associated spacing. Thanks again. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Without knowing more about your document structure, it's hard to say, but if you can use different styles for the headings that have numbers and those that don't, then you can map them to different TOC levels, formatted the same except for the hanging indent. For example, suppose you have two Level 1 heading styles and your TOC includes three levels. You could map one of the Level 1 heading styles to TOC 4 instead and change the formatting of TOC 4 to match TOC 1 except for the hanging indent. -- 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. "kpm" wrote in message ... I have a unique issue with creating Table of Contents. Level 1 in the Table sometimes has automatic numbering and sometimes does not. Because of the numbering, I need a hanging indent of .5". If I have a heading that is less than .5" in length (4 or less characters) and not numbered, the dot leader is removed and the page number moves to the left 2 characters from the entry. The problem is easily fixed if I remove the hanging indent, but then the entries that are numbered do not line up correctly. Any help in resolving this would be greatly appreciated. |
#4
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Glad I could help.
-- 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. "kpm" wrote in message ... Thanks, that is a viable workaround. I work for a law firm and it is often you will see a level 1 heading like "Article I Introduction" which is created using using auto numbering and another level 1 called "Names" or something similar. Using your method I can direct them to use a predesigned level 9 heading with the associated spacing. Thanks again. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Without knowing more about your document structure, it's hard to say, but if you can use different styles for the headings that have numbers and those that don't, then you can map them to different TOC levels, formatted the same except for the hanging indent. For example, suppose you have two Level 1 heading styles and your TOC includes three levels. You could map one of the Level 1 heading styles to TOC 4 instead and change the formatting of TOC 4 to match TOC 1 except for the hanging indent. -- 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. "kpm" wrote in message ... I have a unique issue with creating Table of Contents. Level 1 in the Table sometimes has automatic numbering and sometimes does not. Because of the numbering, I need a hanging indent of .5". If I have a heading that is less than .5" in length (4 or less characters) and not numbered, the dot leader is removed and the page number moves to the left 2 characters from the entry. The problem is easily fixed if I remove the hanging indent, but then the entries that are numbered do not line up correctly. Any help in resolving this would be greatly appreciated. |