

If you are interested in learning more about that I can provide links to articles for you to read. That is a reasoanble approximation of being able to click Clicking on the heading in the nav pane will jump you to that part of the document. There is also an "Outline" view that will show desired heading levels ieīoth in the Nav Pane and Outline view you can drag headings, and their associated text up and down in the document. The number of pages changes depending on the number of words, the font and the font size. To add page numbers to your Word document, switch over to the Insert tab on the Ribbon and then click the Page Number button in the Header & Footer section. This tool is useful when writing essays at university to determine how many pages you are required to write. Here is same document with nav pane set to show only Heading level 1 This website converts the number of words to the number of pages, online and for free.

Here is example of showing all heading styles in Nav pane: Or select which levels show in the Nav pane, to approximate the "tabs"/"pages" in Excel you could show only Heading 1 styles These styles can be displayed in the "Navigation Pane". In the context of how Word is designed you can approximate what you want using Heading Styles and the "Navigation Pane". They have different design asthetics that you have to adapt to. So, Excel has "tabs" (what you are calling "pages"), while Word DOES NOT. They were created by totally separate programming teams. Word and Excel have fundamentally different designs.
