Thanks, Ian.  I've done things like that in the past, but it'd entail
maintaining the TOC by hand, which I was hoping to avoid.  True, I'd be
able to create the initial TOC using org-mode, followed by manually
inserting jQuery calls.  But I'd have to manually edit the TOC every time I
added a new chapter or section and every time I edited a heading title.






On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 1:40 PM, Ian Barton <li...@wilkesley.net> wrote:

> On 29/06/14 19:51, D. C. Toedt wrote:
>  at http://www.CommonDraft.org, and plan to expand and maintain it.
>
>>
>> QUESTION:  I'm currently using a single, multi-level table of contents
>> (TOC) at the beginning of the document.  That ends up being a lot to
>> scroll through to get to the first chapter.  I'd like instead to have:
>>
>>   * a one-level "master" TOC at the beginning of the document, listing
>>
>>     and linking to just the articles (in contracts, "articles" are the
>>     same as "chapters" in books, that is, the top-level sections); and
>>
>>   * at the beginning of each article, a TOC listing and linking to the
>>     subheadings within that article.
>>
>>
> Not an org-mode solution, but if your audience is consuming the content as
> a web page generated from org-mode, you can do most of this using jQuery.
>
> What I am suggesting is you make your TOC collapsible and clicking on a
> heading in the TOC expands the links to the sub headings underneath the
> heading. You can probably do nested collapsible headings so you can expand
> various level of subheadings like a concertina.
>
> I am definitely not a Javascript expert, but I have managed to use this
> technique on some of my documents.
>
> Ian.
>
>

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