The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARY
When using footnotes in a table, it is possible that the numbering for
individual footnotes may change as new footnotes are added within the
table. This will occur anytime a footnote reference is inserted to the
right and above an existing footnote reference.
In the above example, BookmarkName is a bookmark that you place on the
footnote reference number in the document, not in the footnote pane.
Footnote reference numbering in tables is based on a top-down, left-to-right scheme. This is because each cell of the table is considered to be a paragraph. Since it is possible that the table may be changed to text, the numbering of the footnotes must reflect the ordering of the paragraphs after conversion to text. Consider the following sample table. Each entry, ftx, represents the order in which the footnote references are inserted.
After entering ft3, your footnote reference area would be listed in
the following order, as expected:
When ft4 is inserted the numbering will change to the following:
ft4 becomes reference 2 because it is in the row before ft2 and will
be the second paragraph of text when the table is converted to text.
After inserting ft5, the numbering will be as follows:
ft5 is also in a row above the cell containing ft3.
REFERENCES"Microsoft Word for Windows User's Guide," version 2.0, page 749 Additional query words: 2.0a-cd 2.0 word6 word7 winword 7.0 word95 6.0 winword2 macword 8.0 word8 word97
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