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@setchapternewpage
:
In an officially bound book, text is usually printed on both sides of the paper, chapters start on right-hand pages, and right-hand pages have odd numbers. But in short reports, text often is printed only on one side of the paper. Also in short reports, chapters sometimes do not start on new pages, but are printed on the same page as the end of the preceding chapter, after a small amount of vertical whitespace.
You can use the @setchapternewpage
command with various
arguments to specify how TeX should start chapters and whether it
should format headers for printing on one or both sides of the paper
(single-sided or double-sided printing).
Write the @setchapternewpage
command at the beginning of a
line followed by its argument.
For example, you would write the following to cause each chapter to start on a fresh odd-numbered page:
@setchapternewpage odd
You can specify one of three alternatives with the
@setchapternewpage
command:
@setchapternewpage off
@setchapternewpage on
@setchapternewpage odd
Texinfo does not have an @setchapternewpage even
command,
because there is no printing tradition of starting chapters or books on
an even-numbered page.
If you don't like the default headers that @setchapternewpage
sets, you can explicit control them with the @headings
command.
See The @headings
Command.
At the beginning of a manual or book, pages are not numbered--for example, the title and copyright pages of a book are not numbered. By convention, table of contents and frontmatter pages are numbered with roman numerals and not in sequence with the rest of the document.
Since an Info file does not have pages, the @setchapternewpage
command has no effect on it.
We recommend not including any @setchapternewpage
command in
your manual sources at all, since the desired output is not intrinsic to
the document. For a particular hard copy run, if you don't want the
default option (no blank pages, same headers on all pages) use the
--texinfo
option to texi2dvi
to specify the output
you want.