Joy has the right idea using the Chapter Number variable and <$chapnum> building block because, internally, FrameMaker knows what "number" each chapter is. So, once you get above chapter 26, then you switch your Chapter Number Style to Text and put in the desired value (AA, BB, CC, etc.). Using <$chapnum> (or <$volnum>) for this means that your "funny letters" will appear in generated files, cross-references, and variables when you need them to. Of course to make this practical you should do this with FrameScript so it automatically happens whenever you update the book.
I just did something similar for a client that needed their chapter numbers padded to four digits with leading zeros. Again, they just use FrameMaker's Chapter Number Style set to Numeric so that the base numbers are always correct. Before output, they run the script and it changes the Chapter Number Style to Text and pads each value with the correct number of zeros. Very clean and mostly automatic. Rick Quatro Carmen Publishing Inc. 585-659-8267 rick at frameexpert.com *** Frame Automation blog at http://frameautomation.com I feel your pain. Many government workers and lawyers do not know how to count. The way that FM counts beyond Z is correct: AA, AB,... . But AA, BB, ... is not, however there is little that can be done about once it has gone through the courts. On one project I have various mixtures of counting styles drafted by different legal firms and approved by various judges. In the end I had to manually fix the numbering in each paragraph format. Big pain but it worked. The upside is that the numbering is never allowed to change. Alan On 9/03/2010, at 4:05 AM, Owen, Joy W. (KGS) wrote: > Richard, > > Did that... but it's forcing the numbering to look something like: > > AA (yay!) > AB (Boo!) > > I need BB, CC, etc. > > Grrrrr. > > And thanks for the sympathy. :) > > -Joy
