Having different layout and page numbering within a document

See also my post on the pagination extension. All right. It's the elephant in the room, and it's time to address it. How do you have no page number on the first page, then have the second page start with the page number 1 in the footer? Or with page number 42, or 623? (Or how do you have a landscape page in a portrait document?) Good question. It's a common one. It's actually not more complex than the tax code, but there's some setup you need to do that's a little more complicated than the task at hand. I would like to see a checkbox/field combination somewhere  that would let you specify "For this document, start the page footer on page __ and make the first page number be ___". However, for now, we do it this way. There are two things to control in this situation:- Whether there is a page number in the footer--i.e. whether there is any number at all in there, regardless of what it is.- If there is a page number in the footer, what that page number is. You control the first with page styles: you set up the page style, say "yes, there's a footer and a page number in it" or "no, no stinkin' page numbers here" and then apply that page style. You control the second a few different ways. I'm going to show you the most straightforward which is just to create a page break, switch to a different page style, and specify what the page number for that page is.: 1, 42,  623, or anything else. Let's look at part 1 first.  Page styles are actually a really nice, useful feature. Part 1: Setting Up Page Styles Bring up the document you're working with.  Remove any page breaks you've put in between the first and second pages. This sample  document I'm using has some text that clearly goes on a cover page, and then it runs immediately into the content text that should start on page 2. For any of these images, just click on any of them that are too small for you to read. (They mostly all are, but you might not need to get more detail on all of them.) Here's my sample document. I want no page number on the first page and page number 1 on the 2nd page. Page_1 Choose Format > Styles and Formatting. In that window, click the Page Styles icon at the top. Page2_1 Right-click in the blank part and choose New. You're going to make the page styles you need. Page3_1 In the Organizer tab of the page styles window, just name the style  something like Cover Page. This is the one with no footer and no page number. Page4_1 You actually don't need to do anything else. But just to make sure it's clear when we're applying the styles in this procedure, I'm going to suggest that you  click the Background tab and give it the  light gray background. Page5 Click OK. Now, right-click in a blank part of the Styles and Formatting window again, and choose New. This time you're creating the other page style, the one for the main body where you're going to have a page number and start it at 1. Call it Main Body or something, in the Organizer tab. Page6 Then click the Footer tab and turn it on by marking the checkbox. Page7 That's all you really need to do, so click OK. Part 2: Applying a Page Style, Then Switching to Another Click in the first page of the document, where you want the Cover Page page style. In the Styles and Formatting window, double-click the Cover Page style you created. The style will be applied, as you can tell from the gray background. Page8 The style is applied not only to that page, but to the entire document. That's what's supposed to happen at this point. Now you're ready to switch. So click to the left of the first word where you want to switch, the first word of the next page usually. Or click to the right of the last word on the current page. Whatever works. Here I've clicked to the left of "Why". Page9 Choose Insert > Manual Break. In the window that appears, just tell it that now you want to switch to the Main Body page style by selecting it in the list. Page10 That second page is also really the first content page of the document, so you'd like it to be page 1. So select the page numbering checkbox and specify 1. (Or any number you want.) Page_changepagenumber Click OK. A page break will be inserted where your cursor was, and the new page style you specified, Main Page, will be applied from that page on in the document. Page_showingchange Now, there's one more step. You've already created the footer for that Main Page style, but it's time to put content in it.  I.e., the page number. This is easy. Just scroll to the bottom of the first content page (the second page), type the word page and a space if you want, then choose Insert > Fields > Page Number. The page number will appear. And  you already specified that on this page where the page style switches to MainPage, the page numbering should restart at 1.  So it restarts at 1. (If you had specified page number 42 earlier, this number would be 42.) Page11 That's All There Is To It Just create the styles you want, apply the first style, then just switch page styles the way we did in this example. Tips for Landscape and Portrait in the Same Document To have a landscape page in a portrait document, just create a page style and select the Landscape option of the Page tab. So in this example, you could create a third page style, call it Landscape or Horizontal. Switch to it the way we did here with the manual break, but just don't change the page number. Tips for Automatic Switching From One Page Style to Another If you want to automatically switch from one page style to another, you have two options. In the page style definition window, click the Organizer tab and find the Next Style list. You'll still need to insert manual page breaks sometimes but you won't have to switch styles as we did earlier. Tip1_1 In the paragraph style definition window, click the Text Flow tab and find the section in the middle dealing with creating a page break with a particular page style on the next page. Tip2_1 Or try using all three approaches together. Traininglogo

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