Creating Tables of Contents and Figures in Word 2010
Creating Tables of Contents and Figures in Word 2010
This note shows you how to create a table of contents or a table of figures in just a few clicks of the mouse.
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Always update your contents before saving or printing your document to make sure any changes are included. You can set up Word to prompt you to update tables of contents when you print. Click on the File tab and select Options. Select Display, and under Printing options, choose Update fields before printing. IS Skills Development 2
In the example below, the styles Appendix 1 and Appendix 2 are new custom styles: Entering the TOC level means that all text formatted as Appendix 1 and Appendix 2 will appear at the same level as Heading 1 and Heading 2.
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If you want selected text only within a paragraph to appear, the easy option is to use a linked style rather than having to insert a table of contents (TC) field. First, create a new linked style with the same attributes as the rest of the paragraph; then apply it to the selected text. When you create the table of contents, only the text formatted with the linked style will appear. See the Tips and tricks section below on displaying part of a heading or caption for more information. For instructions on creating styles, see the note Formatting with styles in Word 2010.
You can modify the TOC styles from the Styles pane as well as from the Table of Contents dialog box. Click just in front of the page number in the table of contents to highlight the style name in the pane. Move your cursor to the style, click on the down arrow and select Modify. This is useful if you have modified the table Options to include additional styles since it does not force it to rebuild. Rebuilding returns Options settings to their default, therefore you will have to make any changes again before exiting the Table of Contents dialog box.
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At Label, select the appropriate label for the object. You can choose from Equation, Figure or Table, or you can create your own through New Label. In the Caption box, click after the number and type any descriptive text you wish. Choose a Position for the caption and click OK.
For an image, it is a good idea to make sure you have selected it before you insert the caption. If the image is selected, and its wrap setting is In Line with Text (Picture Tools Format tab, Wrap Text option), Word will apply the paragraph attribute Keep with next automatically when the caption is inserted. This means that the image and its caption will not get separated and end up on different pages. For a table, the Keep with next attribute is only applied automatically if you select Above selected item at Position. If you do want to put the caption below the table, select the final row, click on the dialog box launcher in the Paragraph group, and on the Line and Page Breaks tab, select Keep with next. This will keep the table and its caption together. To insert the table of figures, click where the table is to appear and on the References tab, click Insert Table of Figures in the Captions group. At Caption label, select the label and click OK. As with the table of contents, you can use Modify to change the appearance of the table. If you have used more than one label, repeat to create a table for each one. If you want to include all the labels in a single table, click on the Options button, select Style and then select Caption from the drop-down list.
If the style is not linked, move to the style name in the pane, click on the down arrow and select Modify. In Style type, choose Linked (paragraph and character) and click OK. Note: If you cant see the Caption style in the Styles pane, click on Options and in Select styles to show, choose All styles and click OK. If the heading or caption has already been formatted with a style, click in the paragraph and select Clear All in the Styles pane. (You can also click on the More button at the Quick Styles gallery and choose Clear Formatting.) Select the part of the heading or caption that you want to appear in the table of contents or table of figures and apply the Heading or Caption style. Manually format the rest of the heading or caption to match the style attributes. For a table of contents, follow the instructions to create or update a table of contents in the sections above. Only the text formatted with the linked style will appear. For a table of figures, there is an additional step. After adding all your captions, click on the References tab and on Insert Table of Figures in the Captions group. Click on the Options button to display the Table of Figures Options dialog box. Under Build table of figures from, click the Style box to select it and make sure that the style name is Caption. Click OK to finish.
Note: This creates a single table with all your caption labels you cannot create separate tables for each label type. If you do want separate tables, you need to use a Style Separator.
Next, type the first part of the heading and apply the heading style. Do not select the text the style must be applied as a paragraph style. For a caption, use the Insert Caption function, but type in only the text to appear. IS Skills Development 6
Click at the end of the text and on the Style Separator icon on the Quick Access Toolbar, then type the rest of the heading or caption text after the symbol . (If you have a paragraph below the heading or caption, it will jump up onto the line simply press Return or Enter to move it back and click after the separator symbol again.) To finish, format the text with the same attributes as the Heading or Caption style. When you create or update your table of contents or figures, only the text formatted with the style is displayed.
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