Needed Support for Extended Tables/Figures

J

Joe Presson

When a Table extends beyond the page on which it starts, WORD provides a
mechanism for the table to be labeled on subsequent pages using the "repeat
header row" capability. However, it is not always clear to a reader whether
the portion of table being observed is a continuation or is the start of the
table. What is needed is a conditional title to be placed above the table
continuation indicating that it is in fact a continuation, as in "Table A-4
Title Text (cont)" where the text at the end of the conditional title is
unique to the continuation page(s) if they occur. It is not always known
whether a given table will require continuation, depending on where in the
page it starts. But the user should be able to specify a meaningful title to
be applied when it does occur. NOTE: There is an acknowledged need for this
support, since the US Government documentation standard requires the "(cont)
to be shown on continuations (see, for example, MIL-STD-38784, the Standard
Practice for Style and Format of Technical Manuals, page 18, para 4.2.7.4,
which explicitly requires the title to be repeated followed by Continued or
Cont). This is a significant user base needing such a mechanism.
For Figures, there is a similar need for title variations to be printed
in line below subsequent portions of Figures, such as Figure 6 (Sheet 1 of 3)
etc., with only the basic Figure identification to be included in the list of
figures without the extended words (sheet 1 of 3) being included in the TOC.
In the case of figures, the problem of not knowing whether a continuation
will occur or not is not a problem, unlike tables.

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http://www.microsoft.com/office/com...-082b0424805f&dg=microsoft.public.word.tables
 
D

Doug Robbins - Word MVP

The only way to achieve this is to have the (Cont) in the header row of the
table and cause it to be hidden on the first page by positioning a TextBox
over it.

--
Hope this helps.

Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my
services on a paid consulting basis.

Doug Robbins - Word MVP
 

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