The only thing I would add is to expand on David's mention of explicit "resetters" for each format in the series:
Chapter H:<$chapnum>< =0>< =0>< =0> H1 H:<$chapnum>.<n+>< =0>< =0> H2 H:<$chapnum>.<n>.<n+>< =0> H3 H:<$chapnum>.<n>.<n>.<n+> While these aren't functionally necessary--FrameMaker will reset the numbers below automatically--I find them useful for documentation purposes. For example, when I look at the autonumber format for any of these paragraphs, I know right away that there are 4 related formats in the H series. It also gives you flexibility to add more formats to the series. For example, let's say you wanted to add figures and tables to the series and want them to number independently of each other (Table 1-1, Figure 1-1, etc.). Now, your series would look like this: Chapter H:<$chapnum>< =0>< =0>< =0>< =0>< =0> H1 H:<$chapnum>.<n+>< =0>< =0>< >< > H2 H:<$chapnum>.<n>.<n+>< =0>< >< > H3 H:<$chapnum>.<n>.<n>.<n+>< >< > Table H:<$chapnum>< >< >< >-<n+>< > Figure H:<$chapnum>< >< >< >< >-< n+> Rick Quatro Carmen Publishing Inc. r...@frameexpert.com 585-729-6746 www.frameexpert.com/store/ -----Original Message----- From: Framers <framers-bounces+rick=rickquatro....@lists.frameusers.com> On Behalf Of ideasli...@ideastraining.com Sent: Saturday, January 04, 2020 10:27 AM To: framers@lists.frameusers.com Subject: [Framers] FM2019 Volume and Chapter Numbering My method/two cents... You can put the chapters in a book as usual. You can put those books in a master book to control the volume numbers--or if you just have a few volumes you can set volume number manually in each book. You can include the volume number where ever you want--such as x-refs, table titles, figure captions--by entering the volume code. (The same applies to the chapter number and the chapnum code.) Volume <$volnum> [AAAA] Chapter H:<$chapnum> [AAAA] (technically, the "H:" is not necessary in the Chapter style, but I like to keep the chapter and heading number formatting consistent.) H1* H:<$chapnum>.<n+> [AAAA] H2 H:<$chapnum>.<n>.<n+> [AAAA] H3 H:<$chapnum>.<n>.<n>.<n+> [AAAA] *You have your first H1 head as 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, etc. Usually, this would be 1.1, 2.1, 3.1, etc. as it is the first H1 tag. However, if you REALLY want the first H1 to be 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, etc., you will need two styles: First use: H:<$chapnum>.<n=0> or H:<$chapnum>.<n> Following uses: H:<$chapnum>.<n+> (Note: this can be handled automatically in the EDD if document is structured.) The <n> and <n+> process continues for as many headings as you want. The book files needs the numbering set to your preference. (The "H:" letter is flexible but should have the same letter on all the headings.) Here is a reference PDF for setting up book numbering and pagination: http://www.ideastraining.com/PDFs/SettingFrameBookNumberingFrame.pdf Other Notes: Some people like to put all the place holders in each style and to set the starting point as zero. It would look like this: Chapter H:<$chapnum>< =0>< =0>< =0> [AAAA] H1* H:<$chapnum>.<n+>< >< > [AAAA] In my experience, both are these are unnecessary for typical Frame books. Dave Creamer IDEAS Training _______________________________________________ This message is from the Framers mailing list Send messages to framers@lists.frameusers.com Visit the list's homepage at http://www.frameusers.com Archives located at http://www.mail-archive.com/framers%40lists.frameusers.com/ Subscribe and unsubscribe at http://lists.frameusers.com/listinfo.cgi/framers-frameusers.com Send administrative questions to listad...@frameusers.com _______________________________________________ This message is from the Framers mailing list Send messages to framers@lists.frameusers.com Visit the list's homepage at http://www.frameusers.com Archives located at http://www.mail-archive.com/framers%40lists.frameusers.com/ Subscribe and unsubscribe at http://lists.frameusers.com/listinfo.cgi/framers-frameusers.com Send administrative questions to listad...@frameusers.com