In Word, bookmarks are saved with the document file. You'll need to select a name for your bookmark, so that you can easily find it later on. To delete a bookmark, choose Insert » Bookmark, click the bookmark, and then click the Delete button. All you have to do is mark the location in the document, and then go to the toolbar menu and click 'Insert'>'Bookmark'. To go to a particular bookmark, choose Insert » Bookmark, click the bookmark, and then click the Go To button. Click Save As to show your document on the screen. Each bookmark name must be unique in the document. Launch Microsoft Word and open the document you want to convert to a PDF. For more information, see Working with the Selection object. After using this method, use the Selection object to work with the selected items. Then choose Insert » Bookmark to display the Bookmark dialog box (see Figure 3-14), type an appropriately formatted name for the bookmark, and click the Add button.īookmark names must start with a letter (not a number) can contain letters, numbers, and underscores after that and can be up to 40 characters long. A variable that represents a Bookmark object. To insert a bookmark, place the insertion point at the appropriate point or select the objects you want to include in the bookmark. It is important to get exactly the right view on-screen when you bookmark, as the bookmark will preserve exactly your on-screen view. Search 'bookmark', click on Insert a Bookmark, give the bookmark a name, click Add, and OK. Go up to the magnifying glass, just under the name of the document on top of Word. Pretty much everything you do with bookmarks involves the Insert » Bookmark command: Define each bookmark individually: to do this first get the page, section or individual element visible on screen, then right click on the bookmark in the sidebar and choose set destination. Open Word, go to the picture or the content you wan't to bookmark, and click it/edit it.
Bookmarks are hidden by default, but you can display them if you choose (see the next Annoyance). A bookmark can either mark a particular point (between characters or objects) or enclose one or more objects: a character, a word, a graphic, and so on. Word offers several ways of moving quickly about a document: bookmarks, browse objects, and Go To.Ī bookmark is a marker in a document. I need a way to move quickly from one part of a document to another. Select the part of your document you wish to have included in the table of contents and assign a bookmark name (Insert > Links > Bookmark).