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The Word 2010 gallery makes adding a basic table of contents quick: Click the References tab, click Table of Contents, and then click the gallery table of contents you want.
But what if you want more? What if your table of contents needs to provide different information--more levels, or fewer levels? What if you want a table of contents at the beginning of each chapter? What if you want to change the font?
Here are some of the ways you can customize your table of contents.
Quick reminder: Before you start, be sure you've applied styles to your headings. If you want to use a custom style, skip ahead to #4. You can always scroll back to catch the first three tips.
Click in your table of contents, and then press Alt+F9. You'll see a field code that looks something like this:
{ TOC \o "1-3" \h \z \u }
The \o switch determines how many levels are in the table of contents. Change the numbers in the quotation marks. For example, if you want to show only two levels, change "1-3" to "1-2".
To add separate tables of contents, you add a Word bookmark to the chapter or section (or a separate bookmark to each chapter or section). Then you add that bookmark switch to the table of contents code.
Step through the details in Add a table of contents for each section.
The field code now looks something like this:
{ TOC \o "1-3" \n "1-1" \h \z \u }
Step through the details in Add sections to a table of contents.
If you want to use a level-1 heading but you don't want it to look like the default heading style, you can create your own heading style and use it for your table of contents.
(In this picture, TOCBody is the name of my new style.)
-- Joannie Stangeland
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