
For example, if you typed “Mode,” then “mode” will not be found. The Match case option allows you to find your text exactly how you typed it. Click OK to accept your changes and close the dialog box. If you want your selections to be the default options, click Set As Default. Select check boxes to turn on or off specific options. To set these options, click the down arrow to the right of the Search edit box again and select Options from the drop-down menu. There are several options you can set to customize the Find feature. Under Find, select the type of object you want from the drop-down menu. To do this, click the down arrow on the right side of the search edit box. You can also search for Word objects and document elements, such as graphics, tables, equations, footnotes, endnotes, and comments. Has anyone come across ways to control the document map like this? Any suggestions are welcome.NOTE: Moving your mouse over a thumbnail tells you on which page that occurrence can be found. So it makes the navigation impractical if they are all open to begin with. This link shows the steps we take to manually collapse the navigation pane to 'Heading 2'.įor presentation purposes to our users, it’s important that these headings are shown at a set level to the user upon load. We've not had any success from any of the above, and we're starting to exhaust our ideas.

When word 2007 was released this method no longer worked. Map with the selected headings opened/closed. For some reason, this would then save the document Ĭontrolling the document map was not accessible by macros in this version of word, however t hisĬould be done by manually selecting which headings were open/closed, then sign the document with a code signature. Would be opened by default within the document map.

In early versions of word such as 2003, we could decide We have been working with various versions of word now for quite a few years one of our requirements is control over the headings in the document map.
