I am amazed that, after 30+ years of MS Word being a stable in document creation that it requires this much manual setup of a document in order to create a TOC. I would think that, especially with the rise of AI tools, it would be simple to scan a document and make a first pass at finding the main sections and sub sections in a document (likely single word/phrase/sentence paragraphs, for instance, might be one way). Having to go through your document and manually highlight each heading and/or sub-heading, AND having to assign what type of heading, gives you flexibility, for certain, but is extraordinarily tedious, IMHO. Is there not a better way?
very useful video. thanks
Very excellent tutorial. Very hwlpful. Thank you so much Ma
Great video! Clearly explained and to the point. Thanks
Absolutely beautiful, your commentary was very very helpful and joyful; i've also learned so many new shortcuts from this 🙂Thank Youuuuu!!
I am amazed that, after 30+ years of MS Word being a stable in document creation that it requires this much manual setup of a document in order to create a TOC. I would think that, especially with the rise of AI tools, it would be simple to scan a document and make a first pass at finding the main sections and sub sections in a document (likely single word/phrase/sentence paragraphs, for instance, might be one way). Having to go through your document and manually highlight each heading and/or sub-heading, AND having to assign what type of heading, gives you flexibility, for certain, but is extraordinarily tedious, IMHO. Is there not a better way?
I'm going out of my mind. I do not see a References table ANYWHERE. Office 365 subscription, Win10 desktop.