![]() The trick is to use 2 styles for the top level, Tables of Contents are not affected either. When you click the Show/Hide hidden formatting icon to HIDE the formatting, you can see this. ![]() They are just there to provide the structure for the child numbering. ![]() The hidden headings do not consume any space on the finished document. Rinse and repeat for all other headings in your doc.On the next line, write the level 2 (1.1) heading text and apply the Heading2 style.At the beginning of a new section, enter some dummy text or even just leave the line blank and apply the Heading1 style.Click the Show/hide hidden fomatting icon (Home ribbon, looks like a backward P) to SHOW hidden formatting.Click the Format button (in the bottom left corner) and choose Font.Right-click the Heading1 style in the styles gallery and choose Modify. ![]() The trick is to modify the Heading1 style to make the text hidden. You still need to keep the conventional structure of 1 (level 1, Heading1 style) and 1.1 (level 2, Heading2 style) so that 1.1 progresses to 2.1, 3.1, 4.1 etc. Yes, it’s certainly do-able and it’s a question that’s come up before in various forms. ![]()
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