Deirdre,
A variation of Peter's suggestion to use the Chapter Number system
variable instead of the user variable on the master pages as well. That
way, you only need to specify the number once. Alternatively, instead of
inserting the <$chapnum> building block before <$paratext> in the reference
flow, you can just import variables from your document into the TOC and
insert the variable before <$paratext>. However, using <$chapnum> is more
robust, because it allows a single TOC to contain entries from chapters
with different numbers.
--Lynne
At 02:16 PM 6/16/2008, Deirdre Reagan wrote:
>Oh! That sounds the easiest.
>
>Thanks, Peter!
>
>Deirdre
>
>On 6/16/08, Peter Gold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Have you tried setting each chapter's chapter-number system variable
> > to Text and typing in the identifying number, and inserting the
> > <$chapnum> building block into the TOC specification area before
> > <$paratext> on the TOC reference page? For chapters that use the same
> > number, set the Chapter numbering to Use Same Number as Previous
> > Chapter.
> >
Lynne A. Price
Text Structure Consulting, Inc.
Specializing in structured FrameMaker consulting, application development,
and training
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.txstruct.com
voice/fax: (510) 583-1505 cell phone: (510) 421-2284
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