Hm. My original post was via Nabble as I don't save posts to the users forum and Nabble doesn't want to quote Brian properly so I'm trying to post this by replying to the copy of Brian's email which I received and adding the users forum.
First and most important, thanks, Brian for your answer. It seemed easy but it wasn't for various reasons. One is that the original document is on my wife's computer where Libreoffice is the Swedish version, and Swedish translations of interface terms aren't always intuitive! As a consequence I originally added Sections instead of Styles (before getting your reply). Now I have taken a new copy of the original document from Scrivener and moved it to my computer, where Libreoffice is the English version. Remaining comments inline below. > Brian Barker [via Document Foundation Mail Archive] > <mailto:[email protected]> > 12 Jul 2016 14:20 > At 04:24 12/07/2016 -0700, James Wilde wrote: > >I have a book in which I want to insert page numbers. I've tried > >dividing the book up into front information and the actual book > >contents and I want to start numbering from page 1 as the first page > >of the actual contents. There are four pages before the book starts, > >including a blank page on the left hand side. > > <snip> > > I don't know whether this is a bug, but there is a way to achieve > what you want without this problem. > > Footers (and headers) are a property of page styles. As you need > different behaviour in different parts of your document, you should > use different page styles for the different parts - here one for the > front matter and another for the body of the document. The page style > for the body will have a footer with page numbers, whereas the page > style for the front matter may have either a footer with no page > number or no footer at all. > > Once you have created the two page styles, insert a manual page break > at the juncture: > o Apply the page style for the front matter to the document. Do not > worry that this will - temporarily - apply to the entire document. > o Put the cursor at the end of the front matter. > o Go to Insert | Manual Break... . > o Select "Page break". I didn't understand that inserting a manual break would not only divide the document into two regions but add a blank page. So I now had five pages of front matter, but I managed to remove one of them. One thing I would like to know: supposing I needed to do this again between two sections of the content pages, but didn't want a blank page between them - not very likely, I know, but anyhow - how could I do that? > o Under Style, select the page style for your document body from the > drop-down menu. > o As you want page numbering of the body to start at 1 instead of at > 5, tick "Change page number" and select the starting number - 1 - > from the thumbwheel. All this worked fine. So once again, thanks, Brian. > -- View this message in context: http://nabble.documentfoundation.org/zero-page-number-tp4188393p4188466.html Sent from the Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com. -- To unsubscribe e-mail to: [email protected] Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted
