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Create the table of contents. 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.
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.
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.
You'll need to manually type your changes in the table of contents. Update tables of contents in your document when something changes.
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.
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 convert text to a table or a table to text, start by clicking the Show/Hide paragraph mark on the Home tab. This lets you see how text is separated in your document. Convert text to a table. Insert separator characters—such as commas or tabs—to indicate where to divide the text into table columns.
Table of contents. Using the Ruler in Word. Use decimal tabs to line up numbers with decimal points. Add dots, dashes, or other leader characters to tab stops in your document.
An alphabetized list of field codes available for mail merge, forms, and other uses in your documents.
With Word you can: Create a document from scratch or from a template. Add text, images, art, and videos. Research a topic and find credible sources. Access your documents from a computer, tablet, or phone via OneDrive. Share your documents and collaborate with others. Track and review changes.
The ability to collapse and expand content in your document is based on its outline level. You can quickly add an outline level and make part of your document collapsible by adding a heading using Word's built-in styles.