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	<title>Comments on: I need structure in my life&#8230;</title>
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	<pubDate>Wed, 07 Jan 2009 17:41:15 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>By: David Luebbert</title>
		<link>http://www.jeffwalsh.com/2007/01/23/i-need-structure-in-my-life/comment-page-1/#comment-176</link>
		<dc:creator>David Luebbert</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Jan 2007 01:54:16 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Jeff, here’s a recipe that shows how to do what you want using Mac Word. 

First, go to one of your chapter boundaries in your text and type an appropriate title (eg, Chapter 1, Chapter 7, etc.)

Select that chapter title and run the Style dialog from the Format menu. Change the “List” dropdown setting to be “All styles”. from its original "List: Styles In Use" setting. This change will show you all of the styles that are builtin to Word.
 
In the much expanded alphabetical list of styles, scroll up to the “Heading 1” entry and select it. Then press the Apply button. This labels your selected chapter title as a level 1 heading of an outline. If you needed sub-chapters you could apply “Heading 2” thru “Heading 9” as appropriate to any sub-chapter headings you type. The style name you apply determines how the text that follows will be treated  when you view your document as an outline. 

All of the text of the novel you typed has  been given the “Normal” style as a default style by Word, which ensures that it will be treated as the body text in the  outline you are constructing. 

After you have typed your Chapter headings and labeled them with the  “Heading 1” style, run the Outline command on the View menu. This will  display your document content in an Outline view, with your outline headings and body text properly indented and with dragtext handles visible in front of the first character of each paragraph.

Now go to the View menu and select the “Navigation Pane” option. A pane will open on the left side of your screen which will list all of your Chapter titles. If you click on any of those titles in the pane, your document will scroll in the main part of the window, to show you the beginning text of that chapter. 

To see the last text of a chapter select the title of the following Chapter title in the navigation pane, click in the document pane, and scroll up to see the last text of the previous chapter, which you wanted to see.  

I wrote the stylesheet code for Mac Word 3.0, where many of these features were first introduced in Word. I figured your situation with your novel was such a perfect example of the editing scenarios we were thinking about when we wrote that code 20 years ago, that you deserved this hint.

I came over to take a look at what you were doing because Dave Winer pointed to your testimony defending his right to be called a blog pioneer. I think you are right on the money.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Jeff, here’s a recipe that shows how to do what you want using Mac Word. </p>
<p>First, go to one of your chapter boundaries in your text and type an appropriate title (eg, Chapter 1, Chapter 7, etc.)</p>
<p>Select that chapter title and run the Style dialog from the Format menu. Change the “List” dropdown setting to be “All styles”. from its original &#8220;List: Styles In Use&#8221; setting. This change will show you all of the styles that are builtin to Word.</p>
<p>In the much expanded alphabetical list of styles, scroll up to the “Heading 1” entry and select it. Then press the Apply button. This labels your selected chapter title as a level 1 heading of an outline. If you needed sub-chapters you could apply “Heading 2” thru “Heading 9” as appropriate to any sub-chapter headings you type. The style name you apply determines how the text that follows will be treated  when you view your document as an outline. </p>
<p>All of the text of the novel you typed has  been given the “Normal” style as a default style by Word, which ensures that it will be treated as the body text in the  outline you are constructing. </p>
<p>After you have typed your Chapter headings and labeled them with the  “Heading 1” style, run the Outline command on the View menu. This will  display your document content in an Outline view, with your outline headings and body text properly indented and with dragtext handles visible in front of the first character of each paragraph.</p>
<p>Now go to the View menu and select the “Navigation Pane” option. A pane will open on the left side of your screen which will list all of your Chapter titles. If you click on any of those titles in the pane, your document will scroll in the main part of the window, to show you the beginning text of that chapter. </p>
<p>To see the last text of a chapter select the title of the following Chapter title in the navigation pane, click in the document pane, and scroll up to see the last text of the previous chapter, which you wanted to see.  </p>
<p>I wrote the stylesheet code for Mac Word 3.0, where many of these features were first introduced in Word. I figured your situation with your novel was such a perfect example of the editing scenarios we were thinking about when we wrote that code 20 years ago, that you deserved this hint.</p>
<p>I came over to take a look at what you were doing because Dave Winer pointed to your testimony defending his right to be called a blog pioneer. I think you are right on the money.</p>
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