I have set up my mentions in such a way that odd pages display the name of the chapter and even pages the name of the subchapter in the header.
However, I do not always have a subchapter defined (some of my chapters are not long enough to require subchapters), therefore I have plenty of pages in my document where the nasty <#???#> is being displayed in my header. (This string appears when the value of the mention is not defined, it seems.)
Can this somehow be turned off? I would prefer to have it
either be replaced by emptyness
or be replaced by a fallback mechanism (i.e. display the chapter when there is no subchapter)
My proofreaders complain that they find it hard to keep track in which section of my dissertation they are
A solution for this would help their and my poor soul…
ozean wrote:I have set up my mentions in such a way that odd pages display the name of the chapter and even pages the name of the subchapter in the header.
However, I do not always have a subchapter defined (some of my chapters are not long enough to require subchapters), therefore I have plenty of pages in my document where the nasty <#???#> is being displayed in my header. (This string appears when the value of the mention is not defined, it seems.)
Can this somehow be turned off? I would prefer to have it
either be replaced by emptyness
or be replaced by a fallback mechanism (i.e. display the chapter when there is no subchapter)
My proofreaders complain that they find it hard to keep track in which section of my dissertation they are
A solution for this would help their and my poor soul…
Best automated way to do this is to create a page style that is identical to the one you are currently using, without the sub-chapter mention and use it with chapters that does not have sub-chapters (and, if you decide later on to add sub-chapters, you can always switch to the main page style.
Thanks for the tip. That is certainly helpful as a workaround.
However, I would still prefer it if the undefined mention would just be empty instead of filled with this strange string. I think it is a good idea to provide some feedback in the interface telling users that a definition is missing. But the string <#???#> is not very helpful in that regard. Perhaps you could display a human readable string like <field undefined> or some such and make this string non-printing (i.e. displayed in the same blue color that is used to display other non-printing things).
ozean wrote:Perhaps you could display a human readable string like <field undefined> or some such and make this string non-printing (i.e. displayed in the same blue color that is used to display other non-printing things).
I think this is a very sound suggestion.
The other idea proposed earlier—a 'fallback' autotitle level in the event of a undefined field—would be more complicated to implement but would be really cool.
Does an alternate page style within the document not require several page syle breaks that would disrupt the page numbering?
create a page style that is identical to the one you are currently using, without the sub-chapter mention and use it with chapters that does not have sub-chapters (and, if you decide later on to add sub-chapters, you can always switch to the main page style.
A default fall-back mention would be ok,
so would taking out the ???. I dont mind the # so much.
Ideally one could suppress or render invisible the error mention, while allowing the normal useful mentions.[/quote]