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Tips.Net > WordTips Home > Formatting > Bullets and Numbering > Ensuring Standardized Numbering

Ensuring Standardized Numbering

Summary: Word’s built-in numbering capabilities are, in the words of many experts, not very “robust.” This means that your numbering can produce undesired results and even look entirely different on other people’s systems. This tip explains why this happens and provides some ideas of how you can address the problem. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, and Word 2003.)

Keith wrote about a problem he was having in his company. It seems that when he formats numbered lists in a document, those lists don't always look the same when the document is opened on other people's systems.

What Keith is experiencing is something that seems to be a limitation of Word--when you use the built-in numbering tools (like the one on the toolbar or the choices in Format | Bullets and Numbering) you are setting up a numbering scheme that may only work on your system and nobody else's.

The reason I say "may" is because setting up numbering in this way is not "static." If you click the Numbering tool or select an option in Format | Bullets and Numbering, you are doing nothing but saying "use this gallery item to display my numbering." (The gallery is the options presented on the Numbering tab of the Bullets and Numbering dialog box. (Click here to see a related figure.) There are seven options in the gallery.)

If you open the same document on a different person's machine, and they have customized the numbering schemes in their gallery, then the numbering in your document will look different on their system. If you open the same document on your system after you have changed the formatting in the gallery, that document may look different on your system, as well.

Because the built-in numbering tools don't provide reliable results, most long-time Word users shy away from using them. (That's a polite way of saying that they avoid them like the plague.) Instead, they either do their numbering manually, or they use one of Word's numbering fields to create their numbering. For instance, the SEQ field is probably the most commonly used field for numbering. It is easy to use, as has been described in other issues of WordTips, and it eliminates most numbering problems in Word. Other fields (also described in other issues of WordTips) include LISTNUM, AUTONUM, AUTONUMLGL, and AUTONUMOUT. Once you know how to use the fields, implementing them in your documents provides much better results than you could get with Word's automatic numbering tools.

The same sorts of ideas apply to numbering outlines and headings as well--steer clear of the built-in tools. If you need to create numbered headings or numbered outlines, there's a great resource at Shauna Kelly's Web site on this very topic:

http://www.shaunakelly.com/word/numbering/OutlineNumbering.html

Tip #310 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003


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