I confirm the problem and the strange behavior when moving chapters
around or adding dummy chapters and sections.
I, too, have not yet been able to produce a minimal example, and we
have little hope of getting this fixed until we can produce such a
minimal example.
Alan
On Fri, 6 Dec 2013 14:50:20 +0100
"H. van der Meer"
Some further experimentation: interchanging two chapters makes the problem go away.
It is reproducible, because putting the chapters back als brings the problem back. Even stranger, sitting at chapter 5 it kills the interaction for chapter 6 and 8, leaving the interactivity for the intervening and later chapters intact.
Addition of content to the start of chapter 5 helped for chapter 6 but not for chapter 8, which seems strange. Addition of content to the end of chapter 5 also helped for chapter 6
Addition of content to the start of chapter 7 did help to solve for chapter 8.
So I fear it has in some way to do with the moment the output routine is called in relation to the reference processing in \startchapter[title=,reference=].
Hans van der Meer
On 6 dec. 2013, at 12:42, H. van der Meer
wrote: Something strange happened here with the interaction in a pdf produced. There are chapters reacting when clicked in the table of contents but some are not. Moreover, this behaviour changes with the version of context used.
I tried 3 versions of the beta: ConTeXt ver: 2013.10.15 13:52 MKIV beta ConTeXt ver: 2013.11.10 12:23 MKIV beta One specific chapter does not jump to the starting page when clicked.
ConTeXt ver: 2013.12.04 11:34 MKIV beta Nothing changed in the source but now another chapter link also becomes inactive!
There is no ready explanation I can think of. Because the document in question is about 500 pages I do not yet have a minimal example at hand. And as I suspect the problem can have its origin in the complexity and/or size of the document, I fear the construction of a minimal example will be difficult. Therefore I am first asking if this problem is known already. Afterwards I will try to find a small example, of course.
Hans van der Meer