Knowledgebase: Microsoft Word
Footnotes and endnotes on the web page
Posted by - NA - on 17 April 2006 07:54 AM
Solution:

Microsoft Word automatically changes the footnotes and endnotes to hyperlinks (hyperlink: Colored and underlined text or a graphic that you click to go to a file, a location in a file, a Web page on the World Wide Web, or a Web page on an intranet. Hyperlinks can also go to newsgroups and to Gopher, Telnet, and FTP sites.) and moves the footnotes to the end of the Web page. If the document also contains endnotes, Word places them directly after the footnotes. Word inserts short horizontal lines called note separators to separate the main text from the footnotes and the footnotes from the endnotes. In the browser, custom note separators appear as short horizontal lines.



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