How do I set up endnotes/footnotes in publisher? It this is the case, the footnote numbering that you are seeing is a resu. Any advice how to renumer all the footnotes in the new document? Hi Naomi, It seems to me that you copied section breaks into your new document. I accepted all changes, deleted and recreated various footnotes, but nothing worked. When I combined all the documents together, the footnote numbers in the large document are discontinuous. Each of the smaller documents had several footnotes in it. I created a Word 2007 document by copying and pasting several smaller Word 2003 documents into one large document. Where can I find the dagger footnote mark? Insert | SymbolWith Times New Roman its 134 (or Alt+0134 if you want to do it manually without Insert | Symbol).for other fonts you'll hve to look and see if the dagger is available.- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Rob GiordanoMicrosoft MVP Expression'Mark P Evans' wrote in message Where can I find the dagger footnote mark? Rob Giordano (Crash) wrote:> Insert | Symbol> With Times New Roman its 134 (or Alt+0. Joshua Kreitzer can I find the dagger footnote mark? Is there any kind of macro or other method that can be used to automatically renumber the footnotes starting with 1 and continuing in whole numbers until the end of the document? Thanks for any advice you can provide. However, the footnotes contain stretches of numbers that are decimals (for example, footnote 3 might be followed by footnote 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, etc.) and other sequences that are just plain out of order. I'm using Microsoft Word 2002 and I have a document in which I would like footnotes to be numbered consecutively: 1, 2, 3, 4, etc. Margaret - MargaretA You need to set up an outline-numb. If possible, please help me understand what's going on and how I can make numbering work correctly. After 3.0, I right-click the first list item to restart numbering and I get this: 4. In the list following 2.0, I have to right-click 'Restart Numbering'. The list numbering that follows 1.0 works fine. I have a document in which I have first, second, and third level headers (i.e., 1.0, 2.0, 3.0).
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |