Error Not A Valid Heading Level Range
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question is not answered. Helpful answers available: 2. Correct answers available: 1. Reply to this Thread Search Forum Back to Thread List Replies: 11 - Pages: 1 - Last Post: Oct 26, 2014 6:08 PM Last Post By: Luca Moschini dpbsmith error not a valid heading level in toc entry on page 1 Posts: 14 Registered: 06/11/12 A way to automatically hyperlink TOC entries in Word? Posted: Jun 17, word table of contents error 2012 3:48 PM Reply By default, within an actual Word document, when editing within Word, the page numbers in a table
Toc Error In Word 2007
of contents automatically hyperlink to the content--when you click on the page number you automatically go to the referenced page. I expected this to carry over in a Kindle conversion, but it apparently doesn't. I'm using Word 2011 for
Word Table Of Contents Includes Figures
the Mac, and I tried both .doc and .docx formats. Obviously the page numbers are redundant anyway. Is there a quick/easy way to use Word to create a table of contents in which each table of contents entry hyperlinks to the referenced contents? Other than converting the table of contents to plain text and then manually inserting the hyperlinks, of course? Message was edited by: dpbsmith cjeasyaspie Posts: 2,659 Registered: 05/28/09 Re: A way to automatically hyperlink TOC how to go back to table of contents in word entries in Word? Posted: Jun 17, 2012 5:42 PM in response to: dpbsmith Reply By default, within an actual Word document, when editing within Word, the page numbers in a table of contents automatically hyperlink to the content--when you click on the page number you automatically go to the referenced page. I expected this to carry over in a Kindle conversion, but it apparently doesn't. I'm using Word 2011 for the Mac, and I tried both .doc and .docx formats. Obviously the page numbers are redundant anyway. Is there a quick/easy way to use Word to create a table of contents in which each table of contents entry hyperlinks to the referenced contents? Other than converting the table of contents to plain text and then manually inserting the hyperlinks, of course? I think you must have just misunderstood something... In MS Word for Windows, the TOC feature works just fine and does carry over to the Kindle book. When you are going through the TOC creation process, don't choose "automatic" (which builds without giving you a chance to choose anything else), but, instead, choose "insert"... then on the next page, "un-tick" the option to include page numbers. I think that will fix the problem you had with it. Happy Kindling, CJ, at CJ's Easy as Pie Kindle Tutorials http://www.cjs-easy-as-pie.com/ cj-01@cjs-easy-as-pie.com dpbsmith Posts: 14 Registered: 06/11/12 Re: A way to automatical
visit from the selection below. Home » Microsoft Office Word Forum - WordBanter forum » Microsoft Word Newsgroups » Microsoft Word Help Several Tables
Updating Table Of Contents Changes Format
of Contents (sort of like sub tables?) in one docum Author Name Remember Me? Password Site Map Home Register Authors List Today's Posts Search Web Partners Search Forums Show Threads Show Posts Advanced Search Go to Page... Several Tables of Contents (sort of like sub tables?) in one docum « Previous Thread | Next Thread » Thread Tools Display Modes #1 March 30th https://kdp.amazon.com/community/thread.jspa?messageID=794629 07, 03:28 AM posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement nycCTM external usenet poster Posts: 3 Several Tables of Contents (sort of like sub tables?) in one docum I have a document that I expect will end up being around 60-75 pages. It's a cookbook divided into sections. I want a TOC for each section but can't figure out how to do it. When I insert a TOC it goes through the http://www.wordbanter.com/showthread.php?t=78592 entire document and I want TOCs for each section. There are real sections with headers, footers, etc. Any help would be appreciated. nycCTM View Public Profile View message headers Find all posts by nycCTM Find all threads started by nycCTM Ads #2 March 30th 07, 04:11 AM posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement Suzanne S. Barnhill external usenet poster Posts: 33,626 Several Tables of Contents (sort of like sub tables?) in one docum You can create a TOC for a portion of the document. See "A partial table of contents" in http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/TOCSwitches.htm. Find more tips for TOCs at http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/TOCTips.htm. -- 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. "nycCTM" wrote in message ... I have a document that I expect will end up being around 60-75 pages. It's a cookbook divided into sections. I want a TOC for each section but can't figure out how to do it. When I insert a TOC it goes through the entire document and I want TOCs for each section. There are real sections with headers, footers, etc. Any help would be appreciated. Suz
11, 2009 Sometimes Word just won't behave… The problem Recently I had a client's Table of Contents (TOC) that got broken somehow (this is in Word 2003). If you look at the screen shot below you can see that there are two places where it is broken -- section ‘9.3 Performance https://cybertext.wordpress.com/2009/09/11/word-fixing-a-table-of-contents/ Standards…. 141' is split over two lines, as is section ‘10.0 Implementation' on page 146. There were a lot more than this, but these will do as the examples. Broken TOC where heading and page numbers are on different lines What I tried I've had this before and have usually been able to fix it by doing Ctrl+click on the page number to go the heading that isn't behaving, pressing Enter a few times at the beginning of the text for that table of section, creating a new heading with the same text on one of the new lines, applying the appropriate heading style, then deleting the old heading and any excess lines, then updating the TOC. Well, that worked for some of the Heading 3 level headings, but I just couldn't fix the Heading 1 and 2 levels this way. They were broken. So I tried several other strategies, none of which worked (e.g. reapply the style to the heading, reinsert the TOC from scratch, table of contents use the Organizer to copy across the original heading styles from the template, reassign the template to the doc, etc.). What worked What did work was a suggestion from my colleague, Susan Mc. She asked if I'd tried adding new lines ABOVE and BELOW the heading, re-creating the heading above the existing one, then removing all the excess lines and the heading that was misbehaving. I'd been adding the new lines below the heading, so I tried her suggestion -- and it worked! My TOC was back in order and I was happy, and my client was happy too! However, this solution, while it worked, threw up another problem… What can go wrong If any of the headings you replace are cross-referenced within the document, they will become ‘0' or ‘1.x' or perhaps Error! Reference source not found' cross-references -- as shown below: How to find these broken cross-references Typically you'll have a word in front of them that you can use to narrow down the search. Let's use the example above -- the incorrect reference is ‘Section 0'. So you need to do a Find (Ctrl+F) and look for ‘section 0' (without the quotes). How to fix these broken cross-references For broken cross-references with a number like ‘0' (as in the example above) or ‘1.x', then Ctrl+click on the number and you'll get taken to where Word thinks the heading is. Somehow Word remembers where the now-deleted heading was, so Ctrl+click takes yo
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