A master document will help you with large documents by organizing lengthy sections or chapters. It keeps your complete document manageable and consolidated with all the required information in an easy retrievable and uncluttered fashion. This way you can work on each individual part exclusively and yet organize your information simply through the use of the master document.
Creating the Master Document
- Open or create a document you want to be the master document.
- Select Outline from the View menu.
- Place your cursor at the text you want to be a heading.
- Click the Promote to Heading 1 button in the Outline Tools toolbar by clicking on the green double-arrow (this will promote the selected paragraph to the highest level of the outline).
- Repeat for each heading. You can promote your paragraph incrementally to a higher level by clicking on the green single arrow that points the to the left (Alt+Shift+Left) or demote the paragraph incrementally by clicking on the green single arrow pointing right (Alt+Shift+Right). Note: Level 1 is obviously the highest level and as much as you click to promote it, it will not elevate further.
- When you have completed your document , click on the Save As in the File menu.
- Select the location to save the file and click the Save button.
Adding a Subdocument to the Master Document
- Open or create the master document (see directions listed above).
- Select the Outline from the View menu.
- There are two ways of adding subdocuments: a) within the mater document itself or b) inserting an existing document located in your files. Note: you may need to click on Show Document to reveal the following additional buttons of features.
- Creating a subdocument from text within the master document, select the headings and text you want in the subdocument. Click the Create button in the Master Document toolbar of the Outlining menu. Note: you cannot embed a subdocument within body text; it must be imbedded after a heading. Also, ensure that Expand Subdocuments is turned on before using this feature.
- To add an existing file to the master document as a subdocument, first click at the location of where you want the existing document to be placed. Click Insert button in the Master Document toolbar of the Outlining menu, then browse for the existing file to embed as your subdocument and click the Open button. Note: once again, ensure that Expand Subdocuments is turned on before using this feature.
More Outline Tools
You can easily move paragraphs up and down, without Cutting and Pasting, by clicking on the blue up arrow button (Alt+Shift+Up) and the blue down arrow (Alt+Shift+Down). Just by placing your cursor within that paragraph and clicking on the blue up or down button will move the entire paragraph up or down past each subsequent paragraph located above or below it. How much easier does that get?!
The blue plus and minus buttons will allow you to expand or collapse the entire subdocument. Note: the cursor must be located within a heading of that subdocument to execute. This will clean up your document so you can view only what you are presently working on by eliminating the clutter and distraction of the rest of the document.
Once you get used to using this dynamic feature, you will find much more control over viewing and managing large documents. Stayed tuned for other features you can use in creating the more complex documents of a master document.
If you enjoyed this information, feel free to share with your colleagues and social network. I have a nifty little “Sharing is Sexy!” plugin at the bottom of each post that easily lets you share this information with a variety of social media sites.With love and appreciation for your patience and continued readership,
Related posts:

![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=b677dee1-66f5-432d-bf7e-823d64f3a408)
[...] Continue Reading Share and Enjoy: [...]
[...] article will take your Master Document further with some nifty Word features that I find are rarely used or, for that matter, most people [...]