Am 24.04.2015 um 11:19 schrieb Csikos Bela
: Wolfgang Schuster írta:
Am 23.04.2015 um 16:34 schrieb Csikos Bela:
Hello list members:
contextgarden wiki site http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Command/setupheads says that the \setupheads command "has been reported non-working for some people".
For me the alternative=inmargin/normal options work, but the separator= and stopper= options have no effect. I would like my chapter, section etc numbers to have a dot after them, eg 1. 1.1. etc. How could I achieve this? Just in curiousity, how can I change the separator?
\setuphead [sectionstarter=(, sectionstopper=)]
%\setupreferencestructureprefix[default][prefixstarter={\symbol[none]},prefixstopper={\symbol[none]}]
\starttext
\chapter[sec:chapter]{Chapter}
\section[sec:section]{Section}
\subsection[sec:subsection]{Subsection}
Reference to chapter \in[sec:chapter] and section \in[sec:section].
\stoptext
Thank you. This works for me.
Just two questions:
1. The "section" part of the words sectionstarter and sectionstopper above is just a general term for any heading type and does not correspond to the heading type. Is this correct? (That is, there are no chapterstarter=, subsectionstarter= etc. options).
No, it’s part of the key name and you have to use „sectionstopper” also for \part, \chapter etc.
2. The command you commented, \setupreferencestructureprefix, what does it supposed to do? It did not do anything for me, eg: \setupreferencestructureprefix[default][prefixstarter={\symbol[diamond]},prefixstopper={\symbol[none]}]
It comes the starter and stopper from the reference number in the text, compare the result from \in with and without the \setupreferencestructureprefix setting.
Based on the above I used this code tho achieve the required look:
%%% \setuphead[sectionstopper=.]
\starttext
\chapter{Chapter}
\section{Section}
\subsection{Subsection}
\stoptext %%%
I found that \setupheads[sectionstopper=.] (plural) has the same effect.
\setupheads is only a synonym for \setuphead. Wolfgang