![]() ![]() Any heading used under a heading of higher level will be treated as a subheader. “Heading 1” is the highest level of heading, “Heading 2” is the second highest, and so on. When making the table Google Docs will put all text that share a heading format on the same level of importance. This is what Google Docs will look when generating a table of contents. The ones we’re interested in are the ones that start with “Headings.” If you click “Normal text” at the top left of a Google Doc, you’ll see a range of options. This is done by using the “Headings” formatting in a document. We need to let it know where our chapters and sub-chapters are so it can properly format its table of contents. Google Docs isn’t quite advanced enough to automatically know how to construct a decent table of contents via your writing alone. In order to make a table, we need to “tell” Google Docs how to construct it. ![]()
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December 2022
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