WD: Heading 1 Style Starts with "2" When NumberedLast reviewed: March 4, 1998Article ID: Q110380 |
The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMSWhen you use Outline Numbered (Heading Numbering) in Microsoft Word, if any heading style (Heading 1-9) appears in the text before a Heading 1 paragraph, then the Heading 1 paragraph will be numbered "2" when you apply Outline Numbered (Heading Numbering).
CAUSEThis behavior is by design in the Word versions listed above and is different from behavior seen in earlier versions of Word. In earlier versions, heading numbering did not increment the numbering for the Heading 1 style based on the existence of a lower style (Heading 2, for instance) preceding Heading 1 in the document. The result in earlier versions of Word is that the first Heading 1 paragraph would be numbered "1." In Word, the first Heading 1 paragraph when preceded by a lower style starts with "2" because of the existence of another heading paragraph earlier, not because of how many earlier heading paragraphs there are. For example, if you have five paragraphs formatted with the following heading styles:
Heading 2 Heading 2 Heading 2 Heading 2 Heading 1the result after numbering is that the Heading 1 paragraph is numbered as "2," not "5."
WORKAROUNDThis behavior may cause a problem in Word when you use chapter-page numbering in your document. Heading 1 is usually used to mark the start of a chapter, so whenever another heading style appears before the first Heading 1 paragraph, Word numbers the first chapter number as "2." To work around this problem, use either of the following methods.
Method 1Rearrange your document so the Heading 1 paragraph is the first heading- evel paragraph in your document. If this is not possible, use Method 2 below instead.
Method 2
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