We may be compensated by vendors who appear on this page through methods such as affiliate links or sponsored partnerships. If you browse a lot, you might want to make use of these two easy methods for returning to where you started in Microsoft Word. The countless hours of my wasted time has burned the last bridge between me and the Word programmers.Two ways to return to where you last were in a Microsoft Word document My patience with Word has been exhausted.
#My endnote disappeared pdf#
indd document, linked and live for ePub, (and in one pdf for print), the whole book package of TOC, citation notes, charts, photos, captions, and index.Ĭan anyone show me another program that does this? Without writing script and code? Well, Word does have an index as well, but if you can stand all those crashes and formatting corruptions, and new glitches with the latest upgrades, then have all the fun without me. (But in Word and Pages, it also took some time to get the TOC right, and include fancier, above-average graphics in the TOC page and in the chapter headings and charts, as well.) But with InDesign, then, it's all in one. With InDesign's many options, we must sort through the tutorials, blogs and articles to find the right function. with InDesign, but many of the methods in Word and Pages are similar to InDesign. It will take me some time to get the hang of formatting text, tables, captions, etc. As others have suggested, I am now convinced it is worth the time, if you are downloading your books into pdfs and ePubs for the publishing outlets, to start in InCopy/InDesign to start with. Thus it was only the section/page breaks that somehow disrupted the foonotes/endnotes. I had removed most of them, but missed them on this page. These were left over from the TOC setup for new chapters. At that page, I found in the Word docx, a section break and page break. I scrolled to where the missing footnotes started to be missing, matching up the two documents side by side. Still, though, there were missing footnotes. I was in the process of using Uwe Laubender's further suggestions, first by switching to footnotes. docx, which Pages does covert to, even though I don't have Word. Thanks very, much as this led to the solution. That seems safer than doing all the work and risking running into these conversion problems. In the future, I'm going to type from the start right into InDesign or InCopy, not Apple Pages, and certainly not crashy Word. The endotes are numbered with 1 being the original endnote that was 42. When I click on the black box, it says "This story is from the master's primary text flow." Then in a new, unconnected section, in new pages after all the blank pages, not linked to this story, then comes my endnotes, but with the first half of them missing. Shows blank frames with the connecting blue lines. I deleted some of them so see what would happen, and it said there was an object on the page, but nothing is showing on the page. Also, perhaps this is a clue, at the end of my text in the InDesign document about 50 blank pages were created before the endnotes, much more than would be used by the actual text of the endnotes. Perhaps I'll figure out what I did incorrectly at some point, but pasting 40 items won't take too long, and I'm on deadline. So, unless anyone has any suggesions as to where the half of the endnotes went to, I'll just cut and paste them in from the Apple Pages.
#My endnote disappeared for mac#
I used an Apple Pages conversion to Word format, for which to Place into InDesign, not the actual use of the Word for Mac program itself. as I don't use Word anymore, nor do I want to. I'm not able to try Uwe Laubender's suggestion of using a. I have a similar problem, but the first 1 to 41 endnotes are missing, with the 42 to 85 showing up.