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#1
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I've never found Word's TOC functions easy to use, so I usually make my own
TOC manually with short entries and dotted tabs (right justified, etc.). I'm looking for a better option on my current project- I'm not sure the best way to do this, either with Word's functions or a different manual method (maybe it is easy) so I welcome your help. Using Word2003 on Win 2000 I have a bulleted list, where the text for many bullets is more than one line long. I need to turn this into a TOC, where I will have a page reference for each bullet (they will actually be reformatted as numbered instead of bulleted). What I want is for the text to line wrap about 2/3 the way across the page, and have the "...........NN" with the page number right justified. I suspect the page number would be aligned with the first row of the text, not the last wrapped row? So something like: 1. This is my sample text that represents a line..........................3 that is too long to stick on just one line in my table of contents. Right now, I'd just make three separate lines, but in this project, I may have to do continuous edits of the text in each item, and that seems like a lot of work to manage for such minor tweaks, so I wanted to see if I could keep the text as one "piece" that I could edit without messing up the number or formatting of the whole item or page. I also considered a table, but I think it would look funny- there might be large gaps in the ".......NN" depending on the amount and length of text, like "2. Short item .........................4" Thanks, Keith -- The enclosed questions or comments are entirely mine and don't represent the thoughts, views, or policy of my employer. Any errors or omissions are my own. |
#2
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Keith: Put the TOC in a table, then. Also, I don't know what you feel is
difficult about auto-TOCs. Please see: http://www.officearticles.com/word/e...osoft_word.htm ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com "KR" wrote in message ... I've never found Word's TOC functions easy to use, so I usually make my own TOC manually with short entries and dotted tabs (right justified, etc.). I'm looking for a better option on my current project- I'm not sure the best way to do this, either with Word's functions or a different manual method (maybe it is easy) so I welcome your help. Using Word2003 on Win 2000 I have a bulleted list, where the text for many bullets is more than one line long. I need to turn this into a TOC, where I will have a page reference for each bullet (they will actually be reformatted as numbered instead of bulleted). What I want is for the text to line wrap about 2/3 the way across the page, and have the "...........NN" with the page number right justified. I suspect the page number would be aligned with the first row of the text, not the last wrapped row? So something like: 1. This is my sample text that represents a line..........................3 that is too long to stick on just one line in my table of contents. Right now, I'd just make three separate lines, but in this project, I may have to do continuous edits of the text in each item, and that seems like a lot of work to manage for such minor tweaks, so I wanted to see if I could keep the text as one "piece" that I could edit without messing up the number or formatting of the whole item or page. I also considered a table, but I think it would look funny- there might be large gaps in the ".......NN" depending on the amount and length of text, like "2. Short item .........................4" Thanks, Keith -- The enclosed questions or comments are entirely mine and don't represent the thoughts, views, or policy of my employer. Any errors or omissions are my own. |
#3
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Anne-
Thank you for your reply. I'll go with tables then, although my last concern in the OP still stands, I guess I have to live with it. The documents I work with are often created by others, and often modified by many hands, over long periods of time. As a result, the use of styles is not consistent, and when I've tried to update TOCs in some documents that do have them, it goes haywire- pulling in sections that I didn't want because of the style settings, not pulling in others because they were manually formatted without using a style, etc. Depending on the length and complexity of the document, it is often easier (for me, anyway) to re-create a TOC manually than try to clean up the source document(s). That, plus my own history goes back to Word97 and earlier, and so maybe I need to overcome some of my own history, if TOCs are easier to manage these days... :-) Thanks, Keith "Anne Troy" wrote in message ... Keith: Put the TOC in a table, then. Also, I don't know what you feel is difficult about auto-TOCs. Please see: http://www.officearticles.com/word/e...osoft_word.htm ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com "KR" wrote in message ... I've never found Word's TOC functions easy to use, so I usually make my own TOC manually with short entries and dotted tabs (right justified, etc.). I'm looking for a better option on my current project- I'm not sure the best way to do this, either with Word's functions or a different manual method (maybe it is easy) so I welcome your help. Using Word2003 on Win 2000 I have a bulleted list, where the text for many bullets is more than one line long. I need to turn this into a TOC, where I will have a page reference for each bullet (they will actually be reformatted as numbered instead of bulleted). What I want is for the text to line wrap about 2/3 the way across the page, and have the "...........NN" with the page number right justified. I suspect the page number would be aligned with the first row of the text, not the last wrapped row? So something like: 1. This is my sample text that represents a line..........................3 that is too long to stick on just one line in my table of contents. Right now, I'd just make three separate lines, but in this project, I may have to do continuous edits of the text in each item, and that seems like a lot of work to manage for such minor tweaks, so I wanted to see if I could keep the text as one "piece" that I could edit without messing up the number or formatting of the whole item or page. I also considered a table, but I think it would look funny- there might be large gaps in the ".......NN" depending on the amount and length of text, like "2. Short item .........................4" Thanks, Keith -- The enclosed questions or comments are entirely mine and don't represent the thoughts, views, or policy of my employer. Any errors or omissions are my own. |
#4
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Keith,
Actually making a TOC is not that difficult have a read here for an excellent tutorial on the subject. http://www.ShaunaKelly.com/word/toc/CreateATOC.html If you want to stick to your manual solution then a style seems to be the best option. Create your own numbering style using the styles and formatting task pane. In that style you must set the right indent of the paragraph to a suitable distance and apply a right tab setting where you want the number to appear. When applying the style you can use it in two different ways, type the first line up to the point where you want the text to end and press tab key, type the page number, hit shift+enter and type the rest of your text, as many lines as you like. Press enter and repeat the whole scenario. Second apply the style, type all of your text which will wrap to the right indent, on the last line press the tab key and type the page number. Second way seems the best to me as you can easily add or remove text without having to worry about the number moving up one line. Luc "KR" schreef in bericht ... I've never found Word's TOC functions easy to use, so I usually make my own TOC manually with short entries and dotted tabs (right justified, etc.). I'm looking for a better option on my current project- I'm not sure the best way to do this, either with Word's functions or a different manual method (maybe it is easy) so I welcome your help. Using Word2003 on Win 2000 I have a bulleted list, where the text for many bullets is more than one line long. I need to turn this into a TOC, where I will have a page reference for each bullet (they will actually be reformatted as numbered instead of bulleted). What I want is for the text to line wrap about 2/3 the way across the page, and have the "...........NN" with the page number right justified. I suspect the page number would be aligned with the first row of the text, not the last wrapped row? So something like: 1. This is my sample text that represents a line..........................3 that is too long to stick on just one line in my table of contents. Right now, I'd just make three separate lines, but in this project, I may have to do continuous edits of the text in each item, and that seems like a lot of work to manage for such minor tweaks, so I wanted to see if I could keep the text as one "piece" that I could edit without messing up the number or formatting of the whole item or page. I also considered a table, but I think it would look funny- there might be large gaps in the ".......NN" depending on the amount and length of text, like "2. Short item .........................4" Thanks, Keith -- The enclosed questions or comments are entirely mine and don't represent the thoughts, views, or policy of my employer. Any errors or omissions are my own. |
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