A similar problem occurs, when using references:
\startsection[
title={my fancy section},
]
\startsubsection[title={first subsection}]
\in{see}[secsub]
\stopsubsection
\startsubsection[
title={second subsection},
reference=secsub
]
foo
\stopsubsection
\stopsection
the \in reference does not work, as long as you don't declare the reference as
\startsubsection[
title={second subsection},
reference=secsub,
]
Since other context commands don't work that way, I guess something is wrong …
Steffen
Am 16.07.2013 um 10:10 schrieb Steffen Kram
Hi all,
I just converted my thesis from the old \chapter format to the new \startchapter … commands, to be more flexible when defining the titles for toc etc. If you're just giving a title, e.g.
\startsection[ title={my fancy section} ] bla \stopsection
then the title is correctly displayed within the document. Nevertheless, it ends up enclosed in curly braces in the PDF-Toc. My current workaround, if I put a comma after the title
\startsection[ title={my fancy section}, ]
it looks fine. Guess this is bug, not expected behavior.
Cheers, Steffen ___________________________________________________________________________________ If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an entry to the Wiki!
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