

- HOW TO GET CHECK BOX WORD 2007 HOW TO
- HOW TO GET CHECK BOX WORD 2007 UPDATE
- HOW TO GET CHECK BOX WORD 2007 MANUAL
- HOW TO GET CHECK BOX WORD 2007 CODE
* Turn on field shading ( ) then go to any numbered Heading 1 and select the number part of the heading - it should turn to gray indicating that it’s a field and the tab should automatically get selected too.
HOW TO GET CHECK BOX WORD 2007 UPDATE
* Update all fields - select the entire document (Ctrl+A), then update all fields (F9) I don’t know the answer, but here are some things to try: Unless you’re using bookmarks, which is a whole other story…. Text between a figure and its caption - if it uses a different paragraph style - should never appear in the cross-reference. Once everything is a separate paragraph, check the styles applied to each paragraph. If you have these soft line returns, delete them and replace them with a hard line return (press Enter). Is there a pilcrow (the backwards P) at the end of the figure AND the end of the text, or is there a ‘left turn’ arrow? A pilcrow indicates that each element is styled as a paragraph a ‘left turn’ arrow is a soft line return and all the so-called ‘paragraphs’ are actually one paragraph. Turn on your paragraph marks (that backwards P symbol on the Home tab). If that text disappears from the cross-reference, then you had some sort of ‘Caption’ style applied to it, even though you couldn’t see it.Īnother possibility is that the text between the figure and its caption is not a complete paragraph in its own right. Select the text between the caption and the figure and apply ‘Normal’ or ‘Body Text’ to it.
HOW TO GET CHECK BOX WORD 2007 MANUAL
Do you see any other box around a style in the Styles pane when you click in the text part? If not, then I assume that this text has the ‘Caption’ style applied, but your settings for what styles you see listed doesn’t show such a style if it has manual formatting. Yet you say that the text doesn’t have this style applied. Just so I’m clear… You have something like this, right?Īssuming you do, then the main reason I can think of for the text to be treated as part of the caption is if it has the ‘Caption’ style applied to it.
HOW TO GET CHECK BOX WORD 2007 HOW TO
I still do not know how to renumber the figure legends and cross references that have been made using auto numbering and insert caption options. You would think that MS would concentrate on on the basics like positioning a figure on the page and not fuss with modifying the contrast, etc. Does “lock anchor” refer to absolute positioning or to some paragraph? If it is to a paragraph, then what is the meaning of absolute position? I do know that lock anchor with absolute positioning will not keep a figure on a given page. While you might think if you use “absolute position” and select “Page” and click Lock anchor that the figure will stay on the page you set.
HOW TO GET CHECK BOX WORD 2007 CODE
It shows that there is little feedback at MS or the code is all written by programmers who can write it but don’t have to use it.Įven then, when you are in the More layout options menu, there is no help as to the meanings of obscure check boxes such as “Layout in table cell”.

The location of a graphic on the page is a subset of text wrap. Weirdly, the tools to say I want to have the figure on this page in this spot are in an obscure menu in, believe it or not, at the bottom of the text wrap menu!!!! As, “More layout options”. If then start wrapping the text around the figures from the beginning you can do battle with placement. If you make the figures without text wrap and the captions as text beneath them, not in graphics boxes, then it will renumber with F9. How can you make a program with autonumbering that can’t be changed. No matter how many times I do Ctrl+A and F9 they don’t renumber. It seems incapable of renumbering captions. The autonumbering does not understand the legends. I have the same problem with word 2007 and am looking to do in Mr. All figures that have been inserted as a caption are listed in the bottom half.

* Word 2007/2010: Go to the References tab > Captions command group, then click Cross-reference.

* Word 2003: Select Insert > Reference > Cross-Reference from the menu.
