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In order to get rid of some of this titling in the chapter heading (yet keep the toc untouched), redefine the above \@makechapterhead to your liking. 1) i'm already on chapter 8. What i mean is that lets say in the.
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For example, the following redefinition. I am using latex to write my dissertation, and i have realised that on the table of contents and on every chapter page, latex leaves a lot of empty space. I use %% use chapter one instead of chapter 1 \renewcommand {\thechapter} {\numberstring {chapter}} to change chapter 1 to chapter one.
Hi folks, when you're reading a book that is divided into several chapters, what is the accurate way to say it?
The first solution has a bit problem if before the first chapter there's a paragraph. Setting the headers with fancyhdr usually requires changing the \chaptermark and \sectionmark commands; 3 for a book, my publisher asks me to distinguish between a normal chapter (chapter 1,2,3.) and a special chapter (like foreword or bibliography) with two different. However, for some reason, i still wish to use it.
I am aware that \\chapter{} is not available in article class. How can i do that? 2) i'm already at chapter 8. Now, i found an approach on how to do.
I have several chapter titles that i would like to combine with subtitles, typeset in italics.
The second solution works, but, is it possible to make the chapter number and title in the same line? For example, chapter title a very fine chapter indeed. You don't need the latter, as you want only the chapter title in the header.