There are three types of note in Affinity Publisher: footnotes, sidenotes and endnotes. Every note, regardless of its type, consists of two parts:
Footnotes, sidenotes and endnotes are inserted using the Notes panel.
References are characters from a series of numbers, letters, or symbols. For example:
A note body is normally prefixed with the same characters used in its corresponding reference, which establishes a connection to the related part of the main text. Each note type offers several Note position options for where note bodies are collated.
Footnote bodies are positioned at the end of their referencing text frame. You can specify whether:
Sidenote bodies are positioned to the left or right of their referencing text frame. You can set them to:
A footnote/sidenote body's position may automatically change as a document's text is edited.
Endnote bodies are positioned after the end of all text in their story. They can be:
When endnote bodies are moved to a separate text frame, Affinity Publisher will create an empty page at the required position, if one does not already exist, and create a text frame there. Additional empty pages may be inserted to maintain left/right-side arrangement of later pages.
Endnote bodies in a separate text frame are preceded by an 'Endnotes' heading, which can be customized via the Notes panel.
Only one text frame is automatically created to accommodate endnote bodies, regardless of their total length. If this results in overset text, you can edit the endnote bodies to fit the frame or use the frame's Text Flow button to create linked text frames on additional pages.