Since a Kindle page doesn't have a «foot,» all notes in a book were treated
like endnotes.
Not exact matches
If you have millions of footnotes and
endnotes, work with thousands of references or just would
like to see your storylines in cute little windows, Scrivener is just for you.
Endnote links can be a little tricky to locate particularly at the smaller text sizes I
like to use.
For physical copies, you can decide whether you'd
like them to be footnotes at the bottom of a page, or actual
endnotes at the end of your book.
Next, decide how you'd
like to organize your
endnotes (if applicable).
Also IMO, along with accurate and extensive metadata, illustrations and parsed references (
like chapter: verse or chapter: sentence), hyperlinks (i.e., footnotes and
endnotes, glossaries and maps), possibly music and animations will be the key to successful digital book adoption.
For more WordPerfect tips, reviews, links and free downloadable WordPerfect macros by Doug (including a math / date calculator and a macro which converts a document's footnotes or
endnotes to text in order to submit articles to journals and magazines) go here There are many simple tips there, too,
like the steps to add a macro button to the tool bar.