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Using Subentries in an AutoMark File

Summary: If you have a large document and need to create a complicated index, an AutoMark file can make your life much easier. This tip explains what the file is for and how to use it to set up both index entries and subentries.

An AutoMark file, also called a concordance file, can be used by Word to automatically mark a document for an index. You create the file, which specifies what words or phrases you want marked for the index, and then Word searches through the document, looking for those words and phrases and marking them accordingly. You can use the file to not only specify main index entries, but also subentries.

If you want to use an AutoMark file with your document, you must first customize Word's Quick Access toolbar. Follow these steps:

  1. Click the Office button then click Word Options. Word displays the Word Options dialog box.
  2. Click the Customize option at the left of the dialog box.
  3. Using the Choose Commands From drop-down list, choose Commands Not In the Ribbon. Word adjusts the commands available at the left side of the dialog box. (Click here to see a related figure.)
  4. Scroll through the list of commands and click once on the Index and Tables command.
  5. Click the Add button. The Index and Tables command moves to the right side of the dialog box.
  6. Click OK. The dialog box disappears, and a green dot (the Index and Tables command) appears on the Quick Access toolbar to the upper-right of the Office button.

Now, if you click on the Index and Options dot, you will see the Index and Options dialog box and you can click the AutoMark button within that dialog box.

Basically, an AutoMark file consists of a two-column table. In the left-hand column you specify the word or phrase that you want to trigger an index entry. In the right-hand column you specify the actual index entry itself. For instance, in the left-hand column you might enter Menkaure, and in the right column you might enter Pyramids. In this way, every occurrence of the word Menkaure in your document would result in an index entry under the word Pyramids.

If you want to get more specific, you could specify that a particular keyword should go under a subentry. For instance, you could put the word Menkaure in the left-hand column, and in the right you could put Pyramids:Egypt. In this way, every instance of the word Menkaure in your document would result in an index entry under the word Egypt, which is a sub-entry to the word Pyramids. Likewise, you could put Teotihuachuan in the left-hand column and Pyramids:Mexico in the right, and every instance of Teotihuachuan is marked as n index entry under Mexico, which is under Pyramids.