cturner08 said:
Does "at the beginning of a cross-referenced paragraph" in your note refer
to
the heading (in my case) that I cross reference to?
I've been through my document to check that all the paragraphs with
Heading
styles are truly one-line paragraphs. Is there some other way I should be
checking for the source of the problem? Should I be able see problem
paragraphs with all formatting codes revealed? I don't see any unexpected
markings there.
For a cross-reference to a heading, Word creates a hidden bookmark that
encloses the heading, yes, and similarly for other items. To actually see
such a hidden bookmark it isn't sufficient to display bookmarks in the
document (unfortunately).
What you can do is the following: Place the insertion point inside the
bookmarked heading. Open the Bookmark dialog box (Insert | Bookmark). First
click "Hidden bookmarks" (you'll see the names of all hidden bookmarks) and
then click "Location," which will make Word select the bookmark. If this
doesn't work, you could try closing and reopening the Bookmark dialog box;
then Word should select the correct bookmark name in the dialog box. Click
Go To to have Word select the bookmark.
When the problem occurs on printing, it is usually the case that the first
previously normal style paragraph after the referenced heading has now
switched to heading style. But if I check that paragraph just before
printing, it will look like, and be identified as "normal" style.
Yesterday
I deleted and re-created an offending cross reference several times. The
first two, the problem re-occured when I tried to print the page. It
hasn't
(yet) come back again since the third time I re-created the X-ref.
Thanks!
Do you have your bookmarks set to update on print?
--
Stefan Blom
Microsoft Word MVP