
I was also wondering if there is a cleaner way to write the steps, like pasting my content without curled brackets directly, like store my find in a variable and use a second one with stripped content. I was using this thread as a reference but I can't figure out how to properly set my scope and define the fields for my iterations. Now I would like to loop this pattern in order to fix all the inline notes, but I seem unable to find away. Also, I have no idea what the last "With" section is meant to do. The chapter helps the reader to: insert footnotes and endnotes edit footnotes and endnotes change the appearance of footnotes and endnotes by modifying their respective styles control and set footnote and endnote numbering. I had to focus back on top because I needed to exit the endnotes section and go back to body text. Learn how to convert your footnotes to endnotes in your books manuscript in Microsoft Word. In some types of documents academic, professional, and legal, for example footnotes or endnotes are mandatory.
An in-text reference should immediately follow the word, title or phrase. Selection.PasteAndFormat (wdFormatOriginalFormatting) If you are using this reference style the EndNote output style can be found at.

Endnotes.Add Range:=Selection.Range, Reference:="" Here is how it looks: Sub inline2endnote() This example converts the footnotes in the selection to endnotes. A variable that represents a 'Footnotes' object. So far I managed to record a macro for the single steps: Search for pattern, cut pattern, insert endnote, paste pattern, search pattern again in endnotes, remove curled brackets, focus back to the beginning of the document (out of endnotes). Converts endnotes to footnotes, or vice versa. My intext notes can be identified since they are in dark blue between curled brackets.

I am trying to figure a way to convert intext notes (notes and references within the text body) to endnotes in an MS Word document that has existing endnotes and this is my first macro in decades.
