
Tips.Net > WordTips Home > Footnotes and Endnotes > Reference to a Range of Endnotes
Summary: Normal stylistic conventions discourage the use of multiple note references at the same location in a document. If you have a need to include multiple references, and you want those references shown as a range rather than as individual references, the information in this tip will be of interest to you. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, and Word 2003.)
Michael Smith is working with a client's document that uses endnotes extensively. At times there may be multiple endnote references at a given point in the document. These are shown in Word as, for example, (3,4,5,6). Michael's client would prefer that the reference show as (3-6), showing the range of endnotes rather than an individual enumeration of each endnote.
It is not very common to have multiple endnote references at the same point in a document, therefore it is not surprising that Word does not have an option to list endnote references by range. In fact, most style guides take pains to point out that multiple note references at the same location should be "rigorously avoided" (Chicago Manual of Style, Fifteenth Edition, 16.34 and 16.37).
If the client still insists on having multiple endnote references at a single location, one solution is to select the intermediate references in the range, format them as hidden text, and then add a dash. For instance, you could select ",4,5," from the references "3,4,5,6", format the selection as hidden text, and then add a dash to provide the result of "3-6". If you have quite a few such operations to perform in your text, you can automate it slightly by using the following macro:
Sub RefListToRange()
Selection.Font.Hidden = True
Selection.Collapse (wdCollapseEnd)
Selection.TypeText Text:="-"
End Sub
Select the portion you want to hide, and the macro does the hiding and adds the dash.
Tip #211 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 2000 2002 2003
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