Probably the easiest way is to create a new file using the default
Book>Chapter template. Go to the master pages, look at the header
structure, which contains the variables for Chapter and Heading1. Then
copy and paste them into your working file's master pages. Adjust the
name of the paragraphs, i
Please disregard my off-mark post. I need to get back to my old rule of not
doing anything that requires clarity of mind before ingesting a pot of coffee...
Rene L. Stephenson
- Original Message
From: mathieu jacquet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Framers
Sent: Wednesday, June 18, 2008 6:
To extract information from the body into the page headers, FrameMaker
uses the Running H/F variables in the page headers on the master pages.
For example, the 'default' definition of the Running H/F 1 variable is
<$paratext[Title]> which pulls the text of any paragraph tagged Title
into the header
Hi Mathieu:
You could define the Heading1 autonumber as:
<$chapnum>\tâ\t
(using ALT+0151 for the â)
This would read the chapter number setting from the file, so it wouldn't
increment when you use it multiple times in the same file. You could also do
some series numbering settings, but I find
On the master page, insert a Running H/F variable. Define it as
<$paratext[heading1]> (or whatever your paragraph tag is).
mathieu jacquet wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'd like my template header to be formatted this way: "ChapterTitle -
> Heading1".
>
> Imagine I have a Heading1 on page 2 (let's sa