22. Create an Index
13 Apply Paragraph Formatting 21 Create a Table of Contents 24 Create a Table The longer your document, the more your audience will appreciate an index . As you write your document, or after you've written the document, you can mark any word in the document that you want to include in the index, and Writer can then generate the index showing the proper page numbers. If you make changes to the document, you can regenerate the index to keep it fresh.
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A table that appears in the back of some books that lists the page numbers of certain key words, people, and terms in the book.You might wonder why you have to do all the work of marking every index entry. Writer is smart, but it's not that smart! Writer could never know which words you want to include in the index, so it's up to you to mark each of them. Unlike the days of old, however, once you mark which words go in the index, your job is over because Writer will search out the page numbers and generate the index.
1. | Locate Text for the Index Highlight a word or words and phrases that are to appear in your index. By using Ctrl , you can select many index entries at once or you can select them one at a time and then add each to the index individually.user-defined index , if you wish. An index that is secondary to the primary, alphabetical index, such as a figure index or a list of people index.If you want to add a slightly different variant of the word to the index, use the Entry box. Here, you can reword the index entry (when you define one at a time). Instead, say, of using micro , if that's the word you highlighted for the index, you can type microcomputer in the Entry box. The entry in the index appears as microcomputer , although it refers to the text micro .Use the 1st key box if you want to create a multilevel index . You'd type the highest-level name in the 1st key box and then Writer adds the selected entry to the next level. if you want a two-tiered entry, type a value in the 2nd key box, and the selected entry will appear below that in the index. An index entry that contains a primary term such as fruit and two or more secondary entries, offset to the right under the primary term, such as apple, banana , and pear .Once you've defined the proper settings for the new entry, click Insert to add the entry to the index. The index does not generate when you close the Insert Index Entry dialog box. You generate the index once you've added all the entries. Click Close to close the Insert Index Entry dialog box when you're done with it. |
4. | Generate the Index Once you've defined all the entries, you're ready to make the request to Writer to generate the index. Writer will compile the index and place it at the cursor's current position. Therefore, place the text cursor at the end of the document and then select Insert, Index and Tables to display the Insert Index/Table dialog box. |
5. | Make the Final Index Edits Once your index appears, you can edit the index to adjust formatting, such as the font and spacing, if you need to so the index matches the format of the rest of the document. If you find that Writer doesn't let you change the index, you didn't uncheck Protected against manual changes when you generated the index in the Insert Index/Table dialog box. You can regenerate the index with this option unchecked so you then can make any edits you wish. |