foxfanfare <foxfanf...@gmx.com> writes:

> David Kastrup wrote
>> So you need to
>> put basically anything after the assignment to "num" before calling the
>> \include statement.
>
> Thanks for your answer David, but I'm sorry I'm not following you here. What
> should I call before the include statement exactly?

Basically anything.  Another assignment, some music expression, even
something as senseless as

#(begin)

> Because the whole point is that what comes after is referring to the
> file which had been include.

I don't get your point.  If you say that the assignment is not placed
somewhere separate from the \include statement, it's a bit hard to see
why you don't just roll the string in question into the \include
statement in the first place.  The usual use case for an assignment like
that is to be able to separate definition and use.

-- 
David Kastrup

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