HTML-like anchors in word

B

BAM Frustration!

Hi everyone

Here is my situation: I want to define a spot in a word document tha
will not show up as an element on the page, but which I will be able t
refer back to, specifically by referencing its page number. It would b
like using the name attribute of the a tag in HTML in order to link t
a specific spot on a web page

Here is an example (~~~ means a page boundary)

TITL

Writing yadda yadda

~~

This is the second page [INVISIBLE ELEMENT 1

~~

To read about the second page turn to page [INVISIBLE ELEMENT 1'S PAG
NUMBER

I could do this by hand, but I want something that will updat
automatically if the element gets pushed off of the original page it
on

So what's the best way to attack this? All help is much appreciated

EDIT: I'm using Office 2004 on Mac OS X
 
T

Tony Jollans

You want to set up a Bookmark (Insert > Bookmark off the Menu) and a
Reference Field (Insert > Reference > Cross-reference off the Menu). Fellow
MVP Greg Maxey has a web page describing how to do this but I don't have the
url to hand - I'm sure your favourite search engine can find it.
 
P

Peter A

Hi everyone,

Here is my situation: I want to define a spot in a word document that
will not show up as an element on the page, but which I will be able to
refer back to, specifically by referencing its page number. It would be
like using the name attribute of the a tag in HTML in order to link to
a specific spot on a web page.

Here is an example (~~~ means a page boundary):

TITLE

Writing yadda yadda.

~~~

This is the second page [INVISIBLE ELEMENT 1]

~~~

To read about the second page turn to page [INVISIBLE ELEMENT 1'S PAGE
NUMBER]

I could do this by hand, but I want something that will update
automatically if the element gets pushed off of the original page its
on.

So what's the best way to attack this? All help is much appreciated!

EDIT: I'm using Office 2004 on Mac OS X.

Define a bookmark at the desired location and then use a cross-reference
to the bookmark's page number.
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top