Microsoft Office Word 2003 Inside Out (Bpg-Inside Out)

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A field lets Word know that there's additional information you want to include, or an action you want to perform, in a document. You add a field by choosing Insert, Field. The Field dialog box, shown in Figure 31-1, opens so that you can indicate the particular field and options you want to use.

Figure 31-1: You insert a field by using the Field dialog box.

Field Anatomy

When you make the selections for a field, Word inserts a field code in the document at the insertion point. This is the code that tells Word what to insert or what action to call for when the user is working with the document. A field code like the following one includes four basic elements:

{ DATE \@ "dddd, MMMM dd, yyyy" \* MERGEFORMAT }

Field Functions

Fields have three basic functions in Word. You might use a field to perform a certain kind of action, to mark a specific item, or to display the results of a calculation.

Fields You're Already Using

For some procedures, Word adds fields behind the scenes. When you create a table of contents, for example, Word adds {TOC} codes to your document. When you create an index, Word adds the index entry {XE} codes as field codes. Other examples of field codes that might already be in your documents include the following:


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