Saturday, October 8, 2005 Hans Hagen wrote:
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
Hello all,
I have a document which is split into separate \parts. I would like the \in command (& friends) to automatically add the "part" reference when cross-referencing across parts.
Example:
""" \part[part:one]{Part one}
\chapter[ch:one]{Chapter one}
\chapter[ch:two]{Chapter two} As seen in \in chapter[ch:one]
\part[part:two]{Part two}
\chater[ch:2-1]{Chapter two}
As seen in \in chapter[ch:one] """
The first \in would say chapter~1, the second chapter~1, part~1.
\setuphead[part][prefix=part] \setuphead[chapter][prefix=ch]
\setuphead[chapter]prefix=+] % kind of automatic
(actually, prefixes are blabla::whatever deep down in context)
Looks like I didn't make myself clear. I don't want the label prefix to be automatic. I want the reference to automatically add "part ..." (in the text) when the current part is different from the part of the referenced thing. I see that the example was too verbose to be minimal enough. Second go: """ \starttext \part{Part one} \chapter[interest]{Chapter one} \chapter{Chapter two} As seen in \in chapter[interest] \part{Part two} \chapter{Chapter one of part two} \chapter{Chapter two of part two} As seen in \in chapter[interest] \stoptext """ If you compile this example, you'll see that both \in's print the same output, but the second one is referring to chapter 2 in part 1, and this is not clear (it seems it's referring to chapter 1 in the same part), so it should add ", part 1" to make it clear. -- Giuseppe "Oblomov" Bilotta