Word How To Go Back To The Table Of Content Automatically
Carrom board rules and regulations. If I have a document with a table in it, how do I add a new paragraph directly after the table?For example:Note the cross reference (which is a hyperlink) back to Heading 1b.The only way I've found to add a new paragraph after the table (but before Heading 1b) is to put the cursor at the start of Heading 1b, and press Enter. This adds a new paragraph with style Heading 1, which I can fix by changing it to Normal - but this messes up the hyperlinks later in the document.For my above example, doing this results in:Clicking on the bottom hyperlink puts the cursor here. And updating the cross-reference (with F9) results in. Had the same issue with a document that had a lot of tables immediately before the next heading.
Word How To Go Back To The Table Of Content Automatically Video
Insert A Table Of Contents In Word 2010 A table of contents (TOC) provides a quick reference point for your document, giving the reader a brief overview of where to find what content. When you insert a table of contents in Word 2010, Word searches through your document looking for items marked for use in the TOC.
Adding text in-between became a headache.Wanted to avoid copying tables, because pasting them feels like gambling with formats and alignments.Quickest hack I found was:. Add a new last row (simple Enter at the end of the table). Add a column break before that new row ( Ctrl+ Shift+ Enter at the beginning of the new last row you just created). Delete the new row, now isolated from the tableThe column break will insert an empty paragraph between the main table and last row. Too bad there's not (IDK) a simple way to delete the isolated last row with a quick key combination. I've had that issue too.
I think what I proposed could help that too. If you put a new line in after the table, I think there are two hidden characters. One is like a circle with lines coming out if it and the other is a paragraph symbol. I believe you need to hide both of them. Your new text lines should act like separate entities. Maybe you need another line between your text and heading 1b and hide that new line character as well. There is also options for cross reference links to display just the heading type, number, and/or associated text.
That may help as well.–Feb 17 at 16:42.