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How Would I Reference What Is In My Table Of Contents To What Is In The Document

What is the difference between a table of contents and an index?

A table of contents typically appears near the beginning of a book and lists the chapters and subchapters of the book (as well as tables and pictures in some cases) in order of appearance, along with the page number they start at (in the case of listed tables etc., these are listed at the end of the table as a separate series of entries).An index (which typically appears at the end of the document) is an alphabetical listing of all the important terms which appear in the document with the numbers of the pages in which it occurs.

How do i make a table contents on word?

Here's how to get Word to make a Table of Contents for you.

In versions of Word prior to Word 2007:

1. Go to the point where you want the TOC to go.
2. Click on the Insert->Reference->Index and Tables menu item.
3. Select the Table of Contents tab.
4. Under Print Preview there are a few options you may wish to select or deselect, including one for tab leaders.
5. Click OK.
6. This will insert a table of contents field in your document, but since you don't have any entries, you'll see this message:

Error! No table of contents entries found.

Not to worry. To make entries, you'll have to use Heading styles. Heading 1, Heading 2, Heading 3 are by default collected for the Table of contents, but you can play around and get others also. There's even a way of putting in entries that aren't flagged by style.

The Table of Contents also doesn't continually update itself. You have to tell it to whenever you want it to:

1. Right click in the table and select Update Field.
2. An Update Table of Contents dialog box will appear.
3. Click the Update Entire Field button.
4. Click OK.

You'll also probably want to put the Table in a separate section (use the Insert->Break menu item and select Section/Next page from the list).

And you may want to number the pages following the TOC starting at 1.

1. Click anywhere In the first section after the TOC.
2. Click the Insert->Page Numbers menu item.
3. In the Page Numbers dialog box, click the Format button.
4. Click Start At.
5. Click OK.
6. DO NOT CLICK OK ON THE PAGE NUMBERS DIALOG BOX OR YOU'LL INSERT A DEFAULT PAGE NUMBER FIELD. Click CANCEL instead.

In Word 2007:

1. Click where you want the Table of Contents to go.
2. Click on the References tab on the Ribbon.
3. Click the Table of Contents Icon.
4. Select Insert Table of Contents near the bottom of the list.
5. Continue as in Step 4, way above.

There is also a way to get non-heading entries into the TOC. Investigate the Options button/Table Entry fields on the TOC dialog box and the Table Entry Field in the Help system.

Hope that helps.

How do I make a hyperlinked table of contents on a word document?

Your ToC entries are probably already set up as hyperlinks: press the Ctrl key when you click on a ToC entry to see if it jumps to the referenced page. This is the default behavior for Word.Moreover, if you switch to the Web Layout view, your ToC will probably show the ToC lines with the typical blue underlines for hyperlinks — and likely without the page numbers.So what is happening “under the hood”? If you use the default  settings (via References > Table of Contents), Word will create a generic table of contents made up from heading levels 1 through 3. Press Alt-F9 to toggle the field code view to see the TOC field code used to manage this. For Windows Word 2010, the default will display as { TOC \o "1-3" \h \z \u } in this view. The \h switch sets the TOC entries as hyperlinks, and in the web layout view, the page numbers will be left out and the hyperlink style will be applied to the ToC lines. This way, if you save the document as a web page, the hyperlinks will behave as you would expect.If the field code view shows that the TOC field code does not include the \h switch, you can add it. Toggle back to the calculated view again (Alt-F9) and press F9 to recalculate the ToC.Note that if you use the “Insert table of contents...” selection under the Table of Contents button pulldown, you can toggle the hyperlink option on and off in the dialog box. Many other switches are available for this versatile field code; however, many of them are only available if you edit the field code manually.

Should the executive summary be placed before a table of contents?

I'm not aware of any hard and fast rule and generally on the proposals I work on, we do both. Generally for the longer proposals, I'll put an executive summary, introduction/letter page before the table of contents. Basically we're saying on this single page, this is the reason why you need to hire our team, the rest of the proposal is just supporting evidence, but this is what you need to read. Occasionally I'll work on very short proposals that have limited space and maybe printed 'booklet style'. In this case I don't want any wasted blank pages and I do want the executive summary to be the first thing the client sees when opening a document, so I put the ToC on the inside cover before the Exec Sum.

How to resolve MS Word "Error! No table of contents entries found" when you build a table of contents?

Yes, I know the answer to this question. You need to update your headers in each category (like Header 1, Header 2, Header 3...) then you need to go to the table of contents, right-click to update the entire table.
I do not know of a better application than word. Check out Microsoft.com for free audio-course training about this subject.

Just make sure that each header in the document is formatted in Header 1, Header 2, and check your table of contents directory in the toolbar. Not the icon, but actually go to tools, and find the one for table of contents.

How do I create a table of contents in Microsoft Office?

Create table of ContentsIn phrase, you can create a TOC based on a portion of the textual content in a paragraph without which include the whole paragraph. you can mark textual content by means of the use of the Lead-in Emphasis function with heading patterns to consist of the textual content in a TOC.To insert a desk of contents, comply with these steps:begin word, after which open your document.click an empty paragraph where you need to insert the TOC.on the Insert menu, point to Reference, after which click on Index and Tables.Observe In Microsoft office phrase 2007 or in phrase 2010, click on table of Contents inside the desk of Contents organization at the References tab. Then, click Insert desk of Contents.click on the table of Contents tab, after which click on show Outlining Toolbar.be aware In phrase 2007 or in phrase 2010, skip this step.inside the Index and Tables dialog container, choose the options which you want to apply in your TOC, after which click good enough.In phrase 2007 or in word 2010, pick the options that you want to use to the TOC within the desk of Contents dialog container, after which click on ok.

Is it plagiarism if I copy the table of contents for my thesis?

Technically, if the copied table of contents had such generic headings as Introduction, Discussion, and Conclusions, then it might be considered common knowledge, and thus would be fine. But if you’re copying a complex and unique TOC into your thesis, of course that is plagiarism. Plagiarism covers any textual or graphical segment of your paper or thesis.If you mean an honors or graduate thesis, this is the very worst time to be accused of plagiarism; at this point you cannot possibly claim to not know better. One of my college friends in Newfoundland plagiarized on one of his last course papers for his MA, and pfft—there went some six years of university—instead of eventually being a professor, he can go drive a bus. As a rule of thumb, over-cite. Your advisor can always tell you that “you don’t need to cite this, take it out.” Far, far, far better than risking being busted.

Why don't tables of contents in Word update automatically?

It's because the elements of the Table of Contents are fields, so as such are not 'live' objects, but are populated via some process - in this case updating the table.It's possible in 2003 to get the table to automatically update before printing - go to Tools | Options | Print and click Update Fields.  For some reason, this feature seems to have vanished in 2010, but I have to admit I've never looked for it!You can also update the table via VBA.EDIT// Subsequently found the solution:  In 2007 etc. it sits (slightly weirdly) under the Display option, if you click the File button.  You can select an 'Update Fields before printing ...' option just as before.

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