Error Cannot Open File Referenced On Page
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Guest I have created a TOC (in Wd 2003) in a separate document to list all sections of a manual. Used RD with just doc name - did not work. Ended up using path etc. and 90% have worked. All paths are identicle (except doc name of http://www.pcreview.co.uk/threads/toc-error-cannot-open-file-referenced-on-page-1.3908558/ course) , all document names are correct. I think I have looked at every aspect of the links http://etutorials.org/Microsoft+Products/microsoft+office+word+2003/Part+IV+Industrial-Strength+Document+Production+Techniques/Chapter+20.+Tables+of+Contents+Figures+Authorities+and+Captions/Tables+of+Contents/ and document details of those that work and those that don't work. They seem to be the exact same. Could use some help on this subject. Thanks. dbuser, Oct 19, 2009 #1 Advertisements macropod Guest Hi dbuser, Make sure the filename & path is surrounded by double quotes and that the path separators are all either double backslashes (ie '\\') or single forwards slashes (ie '/'). If the error cannot files are all in the same folder, you may find it useful to employ relative path filed coding. To see how to do this, check out the solution I've posted at: http://www.wopr.com/index.php?showtopic=670027 -- Cheers macropod [Microsoft MVP - Word] "dbuser" <> wrote in message news:... >I have created a TOC (in Wd 2003) in a separate document to list all sections > of a manual. Used RD with just doc name - did not work. Ended up using path > etc. and 90% have worked. All paths are error cannot open identicle (except doc name of > course) , all document names are correct. I think I have looked at every > aspect of the links and document details of those that work and those that > don't work. They seem to be the exact same. Could use some help on this > subject. Thanks. macropod, Oct 19, 2009 #2 Advertisements Show Ignored Content Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question? It takes just 2 minutes to sign up (and it's free!). Just click the sign up button to choose a username and then you can ask your own questions on the forum. Sign Up Now! Similar Threads TOC Generated from Styles - Want to Display TOC in Dual Column Kathleen, Sep 9, 2003, in forum: Microsoft Word Document Management Replies: 2 Views: 378 Suzanne S. Barnhill Sep 9, 2003 Difference in TOC: "Update fields" <-> "Insert - reference - toc" Pia Kraus, Nov 16, 2004, in forum: Microsoft Word Document Management Replies: 1 Views: 346 Stefan Blom Nov 17, 2004 TOC level 2 corrupted in TOC but only for one entry Guest, Dec 6, 2004, in forum: Microsoft Word Document Management Replies: 4 Views: 412 Suzanne S. Barnhill Dec 7, 2004 Re: Duplicate cross-referenced footnotes on cross-referenced page Suzanne S. Barnhill, Sep 15, 2005, in forum: Microsoft Word Document Management Replies: 0 Views: 914 Suzanne S. Barnhill Sep 15, 2005 Include all page Numbers in TOC including multiple TOC pages. Guest, Oct 1, 2005, in forum: Microsoft Word Document Management Replies: 1 Views: 284 Stefan
what used to take hours. In the next few sections, you'll learn the quickest ways to compile tables in your documents. You'll learn a few tricks for getting your tables of contents to look exactly the way you want them to, when Word doesn't do the job as automatically as you might like. You'll even learn how to instantly create a table of contents that appears in a frame on a Web page?a task that previously required painstaking HTML coding. NOTE If you're planning a document that will have a table of contents, be sure to use Word's heading styles (Heading 1, Heading 2, Heading 3, and so forth). It's far easier to automate the construction of your table of contents if you've done so. Quick and Easy Tables of Contents Sometimes you need a table of contents but you don't especially care what it looks like. If you used heading styles in your document, you can have your table of contents in less than 60 seconds. To create a default table of contents, click where you want it to appear. Choose Insert, Reference, Index and Tables; click the Table of Contents tab (see Figure 20.1), and click OK. Figure 20.1. From here, you can control all aspects of your table of contents' appearance?or simply click OK to get a default table of contents using heading styles. Word inserts a table of contents based on the first three heading levels in your document, using the built-in table of contents styles in your current template, with a dotted-line tab leader and right-aligned page numbers. If you already inserted specially formatted page numbers in your document, such as page numbers that include chapter numbers, those appear in your table of contents. In short, you now have Word's default table of contents (see Figure 20.2). If that isn't enough for you, the rest of this section shows how to change Word's default settings to get the exact table of contents you have in mind. Figure 20.2. A sample table of contents built with Word's default styles and settings, and displayed in Normal view. TIP When you work in Normal, Print Layout, or Reading Layout view, table of contents entries act as hyperlinks, even th