Forum Discussion
Equitas343
Aug 12, 2023Copper Contributor
Table of Contents - WANT out of order
Folks: I wish to use a Table of Contents (TOC) and to have it show in a nested fashion (I can to do this). However, I wish some of the TOC references to refer to pages out of order. For example: ...
Equitas343
Copper Contributor
Thanks! The subentries are challenging to utilize. And, MOST of what I want is alpha order.
Any other options you can think of?
Any other options you can think of?
Equitas343
Aug 13, 2023Copper Contributor
What if I add a TC Field?
That will allow me to NOT show some of the headings in the body of the document (ie: bananas)....that would be good, as all the text related to Bananas will be at the end of the document.
Now....how do I link my hidden TC field to the latter part of the document?
Can I use a REFERENCE field within the TC Field?
ie: If I referred to the text at page 104.
Would that show in the TOC as I've shown below?
That will allow me to NOT show some of the headings in the body of the document (ie: bananas)....that would be good, as all the text related to Bananas will be at the end of the document.
Now....how do I link my hidden TC field to the latter part of the document?
Can I use a REFERENCE field within the TC Field?
ie: If I referred to the text at page 104.
Would that show in the TOC as I've shown below?
- Stefan_BlomAug 13, 2023MVP
Although a TC field can be used to add entries that are not shown in the body of the document, the entries defined in that manner will still appear in page order in the table of contents. This piece of information has already been provided in the thread at https://www.msofficeforums.com/word/51211-table-contents-want-order.html.
- Equitas343Aug 14, 2023Copper ContributorThank you. What if I used a switch (I think the right one is /n) to hide the page number....could I then add into the TC field a reference? said reference would then point to a page much later?
- Charles_KenyonAug 14, 2023Bronze ContributorThis might work, yes. It would be a pain to maintain, but it could work. Good thinking.