Chapter 27. Working with Footnotes, Indexes, and TOCs
IN THIS CHAPTER
Adding footnotes
Indexing documents and books
Creating tables of contents and lists
Many business documents — books, reports, white papers, and so on — use features traditionally associated with academic book publishing: footnotes to cite sources, indexes to provide a map to where specific content is located in the document, and tables of contents (TOCs) to provide an overview of the document's structure and contents.
When you're working on any type of document — a report, a magazine, a textbook — you can easily spend more time manually creating tables of contents, keeping footnotes updated, and laboriously managing indexes than you spend designing the publication. InDesign helps reduce this labor while also ensuring that your footnotes, indexes, and TOCs stay automatically updated as your document is revised.
Note
Although you can use the footnote, index, and TOC features in individual documents, they're also designed to work across multiple documents such as books. Chapter 28 covers how to manage such multidocument projects.
Working with Footnotes
Many kinds of documents use footnotes — academic articles and journals, books, manuals, and even some magazines. So it makes sense for InDesign to support them as well.
InDesign imports footnotes from Microsoft Word files (see Chapter 17), in addition to letting you add footnotes directly. The process is simple: choose Type
InDesign can help you find the footnoted text in your ...
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