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alan_woodruff_nc's avatar
alan_woodruff_nc
Copper Contributor
Jun 11, 2023

Indexing - How to create a muti-level index in WORD

I need help -- step-by-step -- creating a multi-level index [NOT a LIST] in a WORD document

7 Replies

  • alan_woodruff_nc 

     

    In the Mark Index Entry dialog box (Alt+Shift+X), you can specify a Subentry: 

     

     

    This will result in an XE field such as the following: 

     

    To see the XE fields, you have to display hidden text. For example, you can press Ctrl+Shift+8 to display all nonprinting marks (including, but not limited to, hidden text). 

     

    You can create an XE field from scratch by pressing Ctrl+F9 (or Ctrl+Fn+F9 on some keyboards). Be sure to display hidden text (for example by clicking the ¶ icon on the Home tab to display all nonprinting marks).

     

    If you want more than two levels, you can add them manually by editing the XE field. Use colons as separators. 

     

    The resulting index will look as follows: 

     

    • alan_woodruff_nc's avatar
      alan_woodruff_nc
      Copper Contributor
      Stefan -

      Thank you for your response. I am familiar with what you are describing, but I cannot get what I want, I want to create a four level index like the following. Can you possible give me a step-by-step for each level. Much appreciated.

      Level 1
      Level 2
      Level 3
      Level 4

      Entries for level are section headings. I can make the index include each entry, but I cannot make it put entries under the appropriate higher-level title.

      Characters [This is an Index entry for which there is no page]
      Character Roles [This is a Chapter Name and needs page numbering.]
      Protagonist [Each of these is a topic within a chapter and needs page numbering.]
      Sceptic
      Mentor
      Sidekick
      Romantic Interest
      • Stefan_Blom's avatar
        Stefan_Blom
        MVP

        alan_woodruff_nc 

         

        As I wrote in my previous reply, this should be no more difficult than adding colons and text to the XE field. Update the index field afterwards. 

         

        However, I suspect that you are describing a table of contents rather than an index. In that case, the key is to make use of heading styles for your text paragraphs and then insert a TOC with the desired number of levels via References tab > Table of Contents group > Table of Contents > Custom Table of Contents. In the dialog box, change the "Show levels" option to 4: 

         

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