Add a footnote. Click where you want to add a footnote. Click References Insert Footnote. Word inserts a reference mark in the text and adds the footnote mark at the bottom of the page. Type the footnote text. Tip: To return to your place in your document, double-click the footnote mark. To do something like that you would need to insert a 'Continuous' section break after the table and use endnotes for the table instead of footnotes, with the endnotes configured for 'end of section' instead of 'end of document'. There doesn't have to be any significant spacing - it all depends on how you format the document.
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Word for Windows (2010 and 2007)
To convert one or more footnotes or endnotes:
To convert all footnotes or endnotes:
Word for Mac OS X (2011 and 2008)![]() ![]()
This appears to be a change (I'll say a regression) in either 2010 or 2013 unless someone can show me how to fix it. I have a document written in 2011 using Word 2007. It does exactly what the original post requested, and is typical scientific journal format. The endnotes continue the 2-column body of text. I just opened the docx in Word 2013, and it displayed as expected. I did a Save As and immediately it reverted to the behavior I can't seem to change. Word balances the columns up to the endnotes, then puts the endnotes in it's own 2 column section after that. I attached 2 images showing the before and after. Note that the References heading is in the main body, after which the endnotes appeared (separators were deleted) So, I don't mind it balancing the endnotes that move onto a new page, but I need the endnotes to be part of the main balancing. Do I have to go back to manual fields and cross-refs? I recognized they've made a number of layout improvements on the backend, so I'm not overly upset that it didn't hold compatibility, but I would like to know the process to get that layout, or something equivalent, back. ![]() Comments are closed.
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December 2022
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