1 / 11

References in Word 2010

References in Word 2010. Footnotes & Endnotes. Uses of Footnotes & Endnotes. Footnotes and endnotes are used in printed documents to explain, comment on, or provide references for text in a document Footnotes often used for detailed comments and endnotes for citation of sources.

Download Presentation

References in Word 2010

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. References in Word 2010

  2. Footnotes & Endnotes

  3. Uses of Footnotes & Endnotes • Footnotes and endnotes are used in printed documents to explain, comment on, or provide references for text in a document • Footnotes often used for detailed comments and endnotes for citation of sources

  4. What’s the difference? • Footnotes are inserted at the bottom (or “foot”) of the page in which the reference occurs • Endnotes are inserted at the end of the document on a separate page

  5. References Ribbon • Within the Footnotes group • 1. Inserts Footnotes • 2. Inserts Endnotes • 3. Footnote & Endnote Dialog Box Launcher • This is where you can customize footnotes or endnotes, change number format, start at certain numbers, etc

  6. Table of Contents

  7. What is TOC? • Table of Contents is a list of the parts of a book or document organized in the order in which the parts appear • Easiest way to create TOCs in Word 2010 is by using the built-in heading styles • For example, Heading 1, Heading 2, and Heading 3 — to the text that you want to include in the table of contents • Word searches for those headings and then automatically inserts the table of contents into your document

  8. Mark Entries by using Built-In Heading Styles • 1. Select the text that you want to appear in the table of contents • 2. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the style that you want

  9. Create a TOC from the Gallery • After you mark the entries for your table of contents, you are ready to build it • 1. Click where you want to insert the table of contents, usually at the beginning of a document • 2. On the References tab, in the Table of Contents group, click Table of Contents, and then click the table of contents style that you want, or click “Insert Table of Contents” for more options available in the TOC Dialog Box

  10. Options in TOC Dialog Box • Change how many level headings are displayed, • Change overall look of TOC (through Format), • Change type of line that appears between entry and page number (Tab Leader list), • Etc.

  11. How to Update a TOC • If you added or removed headings or other TOC entries in your document, you can quickly update the table of contents • 1. On the References tab, in the Table of Contents group, click Update Table • 2. Click Update page numbers only or Update entire table

More Related