The best workaround I have found was to change Level 1 Style to Horizontal with Boxed title, but this doesn't produce a neat web part for the site I have with 100 links. If anyone has any suggestions or insight on this it would be greatly appreciated, thanks. Select the section of the text youre working with, then choose Columns and More Columns from the Page Layout menu tab. I have reviewed/tried the Q&A suggestions.
#Word 2016 table of contents in 2 columns update
I have ran this script and it does update the Displa圜olumns value in the web part XML to 3, but the web part still only shows 1 column, as others have mentioned This Technet article, which provides a Powershell script which updates the Displa圜olumns field. I have already read numerous articles, most notably To get Display Columns = 3 working in SP2013. I have recently migrated an important site from SP2007 to SP2013 which had a Table of Contents web part on the homepage (with approx 100 links) and which looked quite neat, and I am struggling to find a suitable replacement web part, so it would be great This was possible in earlier versions of SharePoint (see below), but the 'Display Columns' setting is no longer available.
The "Table Style Options" section of the ribbon on the Table Tools contextual tab lets you indicate that your data has a header row. The first involves making sure the table has a header row designated.
There are multiple parts to the process of making a table accessible. To change the option: Select the whole table by clicking once in the table and then on. You should also ensure the table has alternative text, to describe the contents of the table for those using screen readers. Microsoft Office 2016 This option should already be set as a default. Be sure to designate a header row and use column headings to help describe the data in the table, as well as repeat the column headings on each page the table appears on. If necessary, split complex tables into multiple smaller tables. When using tables in a Word document, keep them as simple as possible. You should only use a table when it's necessary to convey relationships between pieces of data, and not for layout purposes. This helps those using screen readers to make sense of the data contained in a table. In Microsoft Word, it is important to make sure all tables are accessible to those using screen readers.