The manual table of contents enables you to type in your own table from scratch. Note that the two automatic table of contents show heading levels. It shows a preview of two different automatic tables of contents, and a manual table of contents, as well as some menu options. And then I'll click "Table of Contents." A menu of options appears. Then I'll click "REFERENCES," to display the REFERENCES ribbon. I want it to appear before the table of tables that I inserted earlier, so I'll click at the very beginning of that. Start by positioning the insertion point where you want the table of contents to appear. Creating a table of contents from an outline is easy. Word automatically applied these headings to outline levels as I built the outline. There are three levels of headings Heading 1, Heading 2, and Heading 3. ![]() If you recall, I created this document using Word's outlining feature. When you see how easy it is to use this method, you'll use outlines for all of your long word documents. In this video, I'll show you what I think is the best way, from an outline. How else would readers see what a document contains with just a glance, and be able to find specific document sections? Word offers multiple ways to generate a table of contents automatically, based on document formatting or tagging. ![]() ![]() Every long document needs a table of contents.
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