On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 6:57 AM, Herbert Schulz <[email protected]> wrote: > > On Apr 16, 2010, at 8:39 AM, Fr. Michael Gilmary wrote: > >> Wilfred van Rooijen wrote: >> >>> As far as I remember, if you use memoir in the article emulation mode, the >>> command \chapter works in the same way as \section in the article class. >> >> Yes. But I misread Herb's remarks and thought he simply wanted to do away >> with the numbers altogether. Nevertheless, what I get with just the article >> option in memoir class is \chapter starts at 1. If you use a section command >> /before/ a chapter, then you'll probably get a 0.1 for it. Is that the >> problem? >> > > Howdy, > > The real article class doesn't have chapters at all; the hierarchy starts at > sections. >
Note that this is important behavior: an "article" is supposed to be something you can embed, if you choose, as a "chapter" in a "book" and everything should automatically work. Memoir's manual says this about article emulation: "article typesetting simulates the article class, but the \chapter command is not disabled. Chapters do not start a new page and chapter headings are typeset like a section heading. The numbering of figures, etc., is continuous and not per chapter. However, a \part command still puts its heading on a page by itself." To be honest, I'm not sure to what purpose this option is provided, that is, what the use case is. If writing an article, labeling the sections with the \chapter command can only cause problems later, if one wants to then treat the article as a chapter. Memoir is great but there's inevitable tradeoffs: by providing more options, it's more complex, and one needs to get more used to issuing commands like \setsecnumdepth directly to get the behavior desired. Fortunately the manual is excellent! cheers, -Sam. -------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex
