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Word uses the headings in your document to build an automatic table of contents that can be updated when you change the heading text, sequence, or level. Click where you want to insert the table of contents – usually near the beginning of a document.
On the References tab, in the Citations & Bibliography group, click Bibliography. Similar to the Table of Contents builder in Word, you can select a predesigned bibliography format that includes a title, or you can just click Insert Bibliography to add the citation without a title.
Go to References > Table of Contents. Select Custom table of contents. Use the settings to show, hide, and align page numbers, add or change the tab leader, set formats, and specify how many levels of headings to show. For more info, see Custom table of contents .
If the first page of your document is a cover page, the second page is a table of contents, and you want the third page to show “Page 1”, see Start page numbering on Page 3 - double-sided printing.
Alt+Shift+F12: selects the Table of Contents button in the Table of Contents container when the container is active.
Word uses the headings in your document to build an automatic table of contents that can be updated when you change the heading text, sequence, or level. Click where you want to insert the table of contents—usually near the beginning of the document.
In a document you have open, right-click a field, such as a table of contents, a page number, or a cross-reference, and click Update Field. If you’re updating a table of contents, in the Update Table of Contents dialog box, select whether you want to update page numbers only or the entire table.
To modify existing styles to suit your needs: In your Word document, format text to look the way you want for the style, then select it. In the Home tab, expand the text styles list. In the styles list, right-click the style you want to update, then select Modify.
To create a table of authorities, you mark citations and Microsoft Word inserts a special TA (Table of Authorities Entry) field in your document. You can then search the document for the next long or short citation to mark, or you can automatically mark each subsequent occurrence of the citation.
You can list and organize the figures, pictures, or tables in your Word document by creating a table of figures, much like a table of contents. First add captions to your figures, and then use the Insert Table of Figures command on the References tab. Word then searches the document for your captions and automatically adds a list of figures ...
Applies To. On the References tab, select Update Table. Select one of the following: Update page numbers only This only updates the pages that the headings are on, and ignores any changes to the heading text.