Hi, I am often surprised that some nice-to-have feature is already present in ConTeXt and I just wasn't aware. But I am not sure about this one. Is there something like an adaptive structure code which keeps track of the nesting level? In this example the first structure would become the chapter, the second one a section, etc. \starttext \startstructure [title=Alpha] \startstructure [title=Beta] \startstructure [title=Gamma] \stopstructure \stopstructure \stopstructure \stoptext This would ease moving around sections, which might end up as subsections and vice versa. Marco
Am 13.09.2012 um 09:48 schrieb Marco Patzer
Hi,
I am often surprised that some nice-to-have feature is already present in ConTeXt and I just wasn't aware. But I am not sure about this one.
Is there something like an adaptive structure code which keeps track of the nesting level? In this example the first structure would become the chapter, the second one a section, etc.
\starttext \startstructure [title=Alpha] \startstructure [title=Beta] \startstructure [title=Gamma] \stopstructure \stopstructure \stopstructure \stoptext
This would ease moving around sections, which might end up as subsections and vice versa.
%\definesectionlevels[default][section,subsection,subsubsection] \definesectionlevels[mine][title,subject,subsubject] \starttext \startsectionlevel [title=Alpha] \startsectionlevel [title=Beta] \startsectionlevel [title=Gamma] \stopsectionlevel \stopsectionlevel \stopsectionlevel \startsectionlevel [mine] [title=One] \startsectionlevel [mine] [title=Two] \startsectionlevel [mine] [title=Three] \stopsectionlevel \stopsectionlevel \stopsectionlevel \stoptext Wolfgang
On 13-9-2012 09:48, Marco Patzer wrote:
Hi,
I am often surprised that some nice-to-have feature is already present in ConTeXt and I just wasn't aware. But I am not sure about this one.
Is there something like an adaptive structure code which keeps track of the nesting level? In this example the first structure would become the chapter, the second one a section, etc.
\starttext \startstructure [title=Alpha] \startstructure [title=Beta] \startstructure [title=Gamma] \stopstructure \stopstructure \stopstructure \stoptext
This would ease moving around sections, which might end up as subsections and vice versa.
There has always been this trick: \definehead[level-1][chapter] \definehead[level-2][section] \definehead[level-3][subsection] \startnamedsection[level-1][title=Alpha] \startnamedsection[level-2][title=Beta] \startnamedsection[level-3][title=Gamma] 1-2-3 \stopnamedsection \stopnamedsection \stopnamedsection or \definehead[levelone][chapter] \definehead[leveltwo][section] \definehead[levelthree][subsection] \startlevelone[title=Alpha] \startleveltwo[level-2][title=Beta] \startlevelthree[level-3][title=Gamma] but there's also \startstructurelevel [title=first lower level] \startstructurelevel [title=second lower level] \startstructurelevel [title=third lower level] test \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel and here's 'level-002.tex' from the test suite: \definehead[xxxxxxsection][subsubsection] \setuphead [xxxxxxsection][color=red] \definestructurelevels[main][chapter,section,subsection,subsubsection] \definestructurelevels[next][chapter,section,subsection,xxxxxxsection] \starttext \startstructurelevel [main] [title=first top level] \startstructurelevel [main] [title=first lower level] \startstructurelevel [main] [title=second lower level] \startstructurelevel [main] [title=third lower level] test \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel \startstructurelevel [main] [title=first lower level] \startstructurelevel [main] [title=second lower level] \startstructurelevel [next] [title=third lower level] test \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel \stoptext Hans ----------------------------------------------------------------- Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE Ridderstraat 27 | 8061 GH Hasselt | The Netherlands tel: 038 477 53 69 | voip: 087 875 68 74 | www.pragma-ade.com | www.pragma-pod.nl -----------------------------------------------------------------
Is there something like an adaptive structure code which keeps track of the nesting level? In this example the first structure would become the chapter, the second one a section, etc.
\startstructurelevel [title=first lower level] \startstructurelevel [title=second lower level] \startstructurelevel [title=third lower level] test \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel
Brilliant. That's it. Thanks also to Wolfgang. Is there a preferred syntax to use either sectionlevel or structurelevel? \startsectionlevel [title=Alpha] \startsectionlevel [title=Beta] \startsectionlevel [title=Gamma] \stopsectionlevel \stopsectionlevel \stopsectionlevel versus: \startstructurelevel [title=Alpha] \startstructurelevel [title=Beta] \startstructurelevel [title=Gamma] \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel Marco
Am 13.09.2012 um 11:07 schrieb Marco Patzer
Is there something like an adaptive structure code which keeps track of the nesting level? In this example the first structure would become the chapter, the second one a section, etc.
\startstructurelevel [title=first lower level] \startstructurelevel [title=second lower level] \startstructurelevel [title=third lower level] test \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel \stopstructurelevel
Brilliant. That's it. Thanks also to Wolfgang.
Is there a preferred syntax to use either sectionlevel or structurelevel?
I would go with \startsectionlevel which is the new name for the command but the old name \startstructurelevel can be also used. Wolfgang
participants (3)
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Hans Hagen
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Marco Patzer
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Wolfgang Schuster