Hello, Mark Edgington <edgi...@gmail.com> writes:
> A couple possible use-cases: > > 1. a document (or chapter of a document) where the first headline > contains general "introduction" information explaining what the rest > of the document (chapter) is about (similar to an abstract, but not > identical -- something that might contain sub-headings, lists, tables, > etc.), and the remainder of the document (chapter) is the "real" > content of the document -- the place where you want the numbering to > begin. You can still number these parts manually with, e.g., #+latex: \section*{Introduction} before the first section in your Org document. > 2. a document where only one of the headlines and its child-headlines > halfway through the document should be un-numbered (maybe they > represent an "example docoument" embedded within an > instruction-manual). I may be wrong, but this sounds like a hypothetical use case to me. Anyway, your patch will not work on back-ends that rely on Org to compute section numbers (e.g., ascii, html...) because even if you ignore numbering for a particular headline, it still adds up internally. IOW, you also need to patch `org-export--collect-headline-numbering'. But that's not quite it, yet. Some back-ends (e.g., html) use that internal number as a unique identifier for the headline. Actually, the "artificial restriction" you are talking about is a way to allow every headline to be numbered in a unique way, even if that number doesn't appear in the output. Therefore, you need to generate a unique identifier for all headlines, a function to return it, and modify each back-end accordingly. This is obviously doable, but it cannot fit in a TINYPATCH. Since I wouldn't use this, I can hardly judge, but I would appreciate some feedback from other users before we go too far in the implementation. Regards, -- Nicolas Goaziou