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Ensuring Proper Page Numbers for a Table of Authorities

Summary: Automatically create a Table of Authorities entry in your document, and Word might place the necessary field at the wrong place. This tip describes the problem and discusses some ways around the problem. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, Word 2003, and Word 2007.)

Russ works with documents that require the creation of a Table of Authorities. In preparing a Table of Authorities, as you mark each cite in your document using Alt+Shift+I, Word inserts the resulting TA field code at the end of the cite, not the beginning. Since the location of each TA field code determines the page number that appears in the Table of Authorities, any cite which begins on one page and ends on the next will have the second page number in the table.

Russ notes that this is incorrect, since the page number where the cite begins is the page number that should appear in the TOA. He manually moves each TA field code to the beginning of each cite as he marks it, but it would be nice not to have to do this. Russ wonders if there is any way to tell Word to place the TA field codes at the beginning of the cites as they are marked.

There are a couple of things that can be tried in this situation. First, you could change how you are adding the TA field to your cites. Instead of using Alt+Shift+I, paste your TA field where you want it. For instance, let's say that you have a correct TA field set up at the beginning of a cite. Select the field and copy it to the Clipboard (Ctrl+C). Now, position the insertion point at the beginning of the next instance of this cite and press Ctrl+V to paste the field in the proper location. Pressing Ctrl+V is just as easy as pressing Alt+Shift+I, and you end up with the TA field in the proper location.

Another thing you can try has to do with paragraph formatting. If the paragraphs in your document are not terribly long, you can set the formatting for the style used for the paragraphs so that a paragraph won't beak across pages. (You want to set the Keep Lines Together attribute for the style.) In this way, no paragraph will go across a page boundary and you will end up with your TA fields on the proper page all the time.

You may have also noticed that one of the optional switches for the TA field is the \r switch. This switch causes the field to reference a bookmark as the source of the page number used. You can use this \r switch as a potential solution, but the steps you go through might be just as painful as moving the TA field manually. How would you use the \r switch? If you place a bookmark at the beginning of the cite, you can reference the bookmark in the \r switch. The upshot is that regardless of where the TA field is physically located, it always refers to the location of the bookmark for the page number, and that bookmark is at the beginning of the cite.

Of course, what makes this approach painful is that the \r switch has to be added to the TA field manually, and you need to add the bookmark that the switch references. (See—I told you this could be painful.)

One thing to remember is that with some versions of Word, the TA field doesn't have to refer to just a singular place in the document. If you select the full text of the cite before adding the TA field using Alt+Shift+I, then the Table of Authorities should reference a page range if the cite breaks across two pages. In other words, it should say something like 14-15 if the cite spans the boundary between pages 14 and 15.

Tip #580 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003 | 2007

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