Private Doc 3
Private Doc 3
Voila! Word found all the headings in this document and added a TOC.
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En ISO 27001, el control que especifica la longitud mínima de las contraseñas se
encuentra en el Anexo A, control A.9.4.3
1
2
. Este control establece que las contraseñas deben cumplir con ciertos requisitos de
complejidad y longitud para asegurar la autenticación segura de los usuarios.
¿Hay algo más sobre ISO 27001 que te gustaría saber o algún otro aspecto en el
que necesites ayuda?
1. Place your cursor after the paragraph that ends with, “When things change,
just update the TOC” (above), and then hit Ctrl+Enter to push this section
onto page 3.
2. Go to your TOC and click anywhere in it. Then click Update Table, and click
OK (Update page numbers only is selected by default).
Word updated the entry for Update when things change from page 2 to page 3.
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The TOC magic is in the styles that are used to format headings. The heading for
this section, Use styles for headings, might look like a heading, but it doesn’t act
like one. It’s formatted in pieces (font size, underline) instead of being formatted
with a style. See how it’s not in the TOC you added? To add a heading to a TOC, it
needs to be formatted with the Heading 1 style.
Try It: Update the style, and then update the TOC.
1. Click in the heading above (Use styles for headings)—be sure to just click,
don’t select anything.
2. On the Home tab, find Styles, and click Heading 1 (keyboard shortcut:
Alt+Ctrl+1).
3. Update your TOC like you did before, but this time, select Update entire
table (instead of Update page numbers only) since more than the page
numbers changed.
Now Word knows that paragraph is a heading, and includes it in the TOC.
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1. On the References tab, click Table of Contents, and then near the
bottom, click Custom Table of Contents.
2. From the list of Tab Leader options, select Line (last choice in the list), and
click OK.
And just like that, Word found your TOC and changed the tab leader from dots to an
underline.
Remove a TOC
You can’t delete a TOC like you can a picture or other things in a doc. Well, you can,
but if you do it too many times, your TOC can get out of whack. Remember the
heavy lifting Word does for you? All the scaffolding needs to be removed too. Tell
Word to remove the TOC, and Word will clean up after itself.
Try It: On the References tab, click Table of Contents, and then near the
bottom, click Remove Table of Contents.
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Poof! The TOC, and the stuff to make it work, are gone from the document. But you
can add your TOC back any time, in any location. Word will remember everything
you did—even your change to the tab leader.
Under the hood: The stuff Word removes is a collection of hidden bookmarks that
keep track of the heading text and page number shown in the TOC.
Explore more
If you want to customize your TOC even more, give these a try. (If you didn’t add
your TOC back, do that now. You can add it above this section if you’d like. Or, if
removing it is the last thing you did, press Ctrl+Z to undo.)
Like the rest of the TOC magic, all the TOC Level 1 entries changed too.
Under the hood: Okay, it’s not really magic. The TOC entries are assigned to a
style (TOC 1, TOC 2, and so on), and those styles are set to update automatically
whenever you make a formatting change.
1. On the References tab, click Table of Contents, and then near the
bottom, click Custom Table of Contents.
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2. Change Show levels to 1 and click OK.
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Try it: Go to Tell me what you want to do near the top of the window, and then
type what you want to do.
For example, type:
table of contents to quickly get to the Table of Contents options and other TOC
help topics
styles if you want to know more about using styles in Word
help to go to Word help
training to see the list of Word training courses
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