Thanks a lot, very concise. I was wondering if the \stopchapter (or more 
generally \stop<head>) were needed ? In my document I write in some instances:


\startsubsection 


Bla bla 


\startsubsection 


etc ….


and it seems to work fine (but perhaps pure luck or is the \startsubsection 
implictly ends the previous one).


Best regards

Joseph






Sent from Windows Mail





From: Alan BRASLAU
Sent: ‎Sunday‎, ‎October‎ ‎25‎, ‎2015 ‎6‎:‎00‎ ‎PM
To: josephcan...@gmail.com
Cc: ntg-context@ntg.nl





Easier:

\setuplabeltext [chapter=Chapitre ] % with trailing space; blank by default
\starttext

 \startchapter
   Some text.
 \stopchapter

 \startchapter
   Some more text.
 \stopchapter

\stoptext


Alan


On Sun, 25 Oct 2015 17:32:30 +0100
"Thomas A. Schmitz" <thomas.schm...@uni-bonn.de> wrote:

> Is that what you're looking for?
> 
> 
> \define[2]\MyChapterTitle%
> {#2: #1}
> 
> \setuphead[chapter]
>    [command=\MyChapterTitle]
> 
> \starttext
> 
> \startchapter [title=Some Title]
> 
> Some text.
> 
> \stoptext
> 
> When you define a command, #1 is your chapter/section/whatever
> number, #2 is your title.
> 
> (For future reference: please make minimal examples when asking a
> question.)
> 
> Thomas
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