Titles

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Revision as of 08:29, 5 April 2005 by Patrick Gundlach (talk | contribs) (Reverted edit of 220.248.24.26, changed back to last version by 81.62.88.51)
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< Structurals | Visuals >

Default

numberedunnumbered
\part--
\chapter\title
\section\subject
\subsection\subsubject
\subsubsection\subsubsubject
......

Every heading command can take an optional parameter as reference:

\title[hasselt-by-night]{Hasselt by night}

The bracket pair is optional and used for internal References. If you want to refer to this header you type for example

\at{page}[hasselt-by-night].

(see \at)

Of course you can switch off numbering even for a "numbered" title, see \setuphead.

Your own title styles

Sometimes the possibilities of \setuphead aren't enough. Just define your own styling command like this:

\def\MyChapterCommand#1#2{\framed[frame=off, bottomframe=on, topframe=on]{\vbox{#1\blank#2}}}
% #1 is number, #2 is text
% \vbox is needed for \blank to work
\setuphead[chapter][command=\MyChapterCommand, style={\ss\bfa}]

so \chapter{My First Chapter} looks like:

Your own titling levels

Of course you can define your own titling commands and probably must adapt the default settings.

\definehead[myheader][section]

\setuphead[myheader]
[numberstyle=bold,
textstyle=cap,
before=\hairline\blank,
after=\nowhitespace\hairline]

\myheader[hasselt-ref]{Hasselt makes headlines}

A new header \myheader is defined and it inherits the properties of section (title, subject, whatever). You can "define" several headers at once!


Table(s) of Content

Default:

\completecontent % with title
\placecontent % without title

Define your own tables of somewhat with \definelist and \setuplist!