Hans wrote:
the next beta has: \namedstructureheadlocation{name} so that you can compare \currentlistentrylocation with \namedstructureheadlocation{chapter} (todo: also store locations elsewhere?) Best document this before we forget about it.
Is this a good description of the command's behavior? All structure heads, regardless of level, get a location number in the order in which they appear. Like so (see also MWE at bottom of this e-mail): \section{Alpha} % location number: 1; type: section; section number: 1 \section{Beta} % location number: 2; type: section; section number: 2 \subsection{Aap} % location number: 3; type: subsection; subsection number: 1 \subsection{Noot} % location number: 4; type: subsection; subsection number: 2 \section{Gamma} % location number: 5; type: section; section number: 3 \namedstructureheadlocation{X} then returns the location number of the current X, where X is the name of a structure level (e.g. 'chapter', 'section', etc.) If you ask for e.g. \namedstructureheadlocation{chapter}, and you are not in a chapter, then 0 is returned. Anything missing? @Marco: sweet job on http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Command/definelistalternative. I have taken the lazy liberty of redirecting Command/currentlistentrylocation Command/structureheadlocation Command/currentlistentrynumber etc to that page for the now, so that they at least appear in the list of commands. --Sietse \starttext \startsection [title=alpha] \stopsection \startsection [title=beta] \startsubsection[title=aap] \namedstructureheadlocation{section} \namedstructureheadlocation{subsection} \startsubsection[title=noot] \namedstructureheadlocation{section} \namedstructureheadlocation{subsection} \stopsubsection \stopsection \startsection [title=gamma] \namedstructureheadlocation{section} \stopsection \stoptext