Certain characters, e.g. punctuations, or spaces are not allowed in the
bookmarks. But if you change the style to Heading n, almost all characters
are allowed.
Is it possible to manually add these links? I have a document with a lot of
headings, but the styles are not Heading n, and each of these headings start
with numbering, for example, 1.3.2. I want to create a hyperlink for every
heading. I cannot change its style, as there are many styles in the document,
and one is dependent upon the other. If I change the style, the formatting
will look very different, which is not what I want.
I would apppreciate it if someone can give some suggestions or direct me to
other sources that can help.
Assuming your Headings are autonumbered, you should be able to access
these hyperlinks with the Insert Cross Reference tool. (The first line
in the drop-down is "numbered items," which includes both "Heading n"
paragraphs and all other paragraphs with autonumbering.)
On Jan 19, 4:31 am, Chongchong <Chongch...@discussions.microsoft.com>
wrote:
I'm using Word 2003.
Yes, I can find these numbered items in the drop-down. However, in the body
of the document, there are a lot of numbered steps. So there are too many
items to choose from. I am wondering whether it is possible to only display
the numbered headings.
"Peter T. Daniels" wrote:
> .
>
(Unless that was added in Word2007?? They did make one improvement --
the Cross References don't flip back to the top of the list every time
you leave and return to the panel.)
On Jan 21, 10:35 pm, Chongchong <Chongch...@discussions.microsoft.com>
wrote:
Thanks.
Is it possible to upload an attachment? That would explain the issue better,
but I don't see any options for it.
Well, in my document, we do not use the Heading n styles. Instead, we use
Style1, Style2, Style3, etc. I was wondering whether it is possible to
display only those Style(n) styles in bookmarks, cross-references, etc.
"Peter T. Daniels" wrote:
> .
>
Is there a reason not to use the built-in styles for headings? That
would solve your problem.
You can alter everything about the built-in styles (font, margins,
indents, spacing, etc.) to match your "style1" etc., and change all
the paragraphs from one to the other with Find/Replace > More > Format
> Styles.
On Jan 22, 10:04 am, Chongchong <Chongch...@discussions.microsoft.com>
wrote:
Thanks. The reasons for not using the built-in styles are very complicated.
I will make a short video to show what the problems are and what I want to
achieve.
Before I upload the video, I have a question. If I apply "Heading 1" style
to a paragraph in my document, and send it to a colleague who has modified
"Heading 1" style in his Word. Will the look and feel still be the same? What
will happen if this document goes through several rounds of review and
updates?
"Peter T. Daniels" wrote:
> .
>
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
http://word.mvps.org
"Chongchong" <Chong...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:FA834859-AE09-4663...@microsoft.com...
Thank you very much. The information is very helpful.
But still, there are some issues if we use the built-in styles in our
document.
I will record a video and upload it somewhere this weekend.
"Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote:
> .
>
--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP
(Message posted via news.eternal-september.org)
"richa" <ri...@domain-xyz.in> wrote in message
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