![]() While pressing F11 may work great if you have only a couple of fields in a document, and they are in a single story, you can also use the Search capabilities in Word to search for fields. This means that you will need to place the insertion point in the story in which you want to find fields. Thus, pressing F11 if your insertion point is in the header will find the next field in the header. Pressing F11 will find the next field in the story in which the insertion pointer is located. Common ones are the header, footer, footnotes, and endnotes. ![]() The main document is a story, but there are other stories, as well. A story can be thought of as a portion of a document. I should stop to explain what a story is. ![]() This causes Word to jump to the next field in the current document story, regardless of what that field does. ![]() The first is to go to the beginning of the document and simply press the F11 key. There are two very easy ways you can do this. There may be times when you are working in a document and you want to search for fields that the document may contain. ![]()
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January 2023
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