Do one of the following to mark index
entries:
Mark
words or phrases
- To use existing text as an index entry, select the text. To enter your own text as an index entry, click where you want to insert the index entry.
- Press ALT+SHIFT+X.
- To create the main index entry, type or edit the text in the Main entry
box. You can customize the entry by creating a subentry
or by creating a cross-reference to another entry.
Notes
- To include a third-level entry, type the subentry text followed by a
colon (:) and then type the text of the third-level entry.
- If you want to use a symbol, such as @, in the entry,
type ;# (semicolon followed by the number sign)
immediately following the
symbol.
- To select a format for the page numbers that will appear in the index,
click to select the Bold or Italic check box below Page number format.
If you want to format the text for the index, right-click it in the Main
entry or Subentry box, and click Font. Select the
formatting options that you want to use.
For Help on an option, click the question mark
,
and then click the option.
- To mark the index entry, click Mark. To mark all occurrences of this
text in the document, click Mark
All.
- To mark additional index entries, select the text, click in the
Mark Index Entry dialog box, and then repeat steps 3 through 5.
Mark entries for text that spans a range of pages
- Select the range of text you want the index entry to refer
to.
- On the Insert menu, click Bookmark.
- In the Bookmark name box, type a name, and then click Add.
- In the document, click at the end of the text you marked with a bookmark.
- Press ALT+SHIFT+X.
- In the Main entry box, type the index entry for the marked text.
- To select a format for the page numbers that will appear in the index,
click to select the Bold or Italic check box below Page number format.
If you want to format the text for the index, right-click it in the Main
entry or Subentry box, and click Font. Select the
formatting options that you want to use.
For Help on an option, click the question mark
,
and then click the option.
- Under Options, click Page range.
- In the Bookmark box, type or select the bookmark name you typed in step 3.
- Click Mark.
Automatically
mark entries by using a concordance file
- Create a concordance
file.
How?
- Click Insert Table
on the
Standard
toolbar.
- Drag to select two columns.
- In the first column, enter the text you want Microsoft Word to
search for and mark as an index entry. Make sure to enter the text exactly as
it appears in the document. Then press TAB.
- In the second column, type the index entry for the text in the
first column. Then press TAB. If you want to create a subentry,
type the main entry followed by a colon (:) and the subentry.
- Repeat steps 3 and 4 for each index reference and entry.
- Save the concordance file.
Tips
- To make sure Word marks all the text you want to index, list all
forms of the text you want to search for. For example, type erupt, erupting,
and eruption in three separate cells in the left column, and then type volcanoes
in the matching cells in the right column.
- To speed up the creation of a concordance file, first open both
the concordance file and the document you want to index. To see both documents
at once, click Arrange All on the Window menu. Then copy text
from the document you want to index into the first column of the concordance
file.
- Open the document you want to index.
- On the Insert menu, point to Reference, click Index and
Tables, and then click the Index tab.
- Click AutoMark.
- In the File name box, enter the name of the concordance
file you want to use.
- Click Open.
Word searches through the document for each exact occurrence of
text in the first column of the concordance file, and then it uses the text in
the second column as the index entry. Word marks only the first occurrence of an
entry in each paragraph.
Note Microsoft Word inserts each marked index
entry as an XE (Index
Entry) field in hidden
text
format. If you don't see the XE fields, click Show/Hide
on the
Standard toolbar.