design-science mathtype Manuel D’Utilisation
MathType User Manual
Chapter/Section Breaks
Section Numbers
If you don’t want section
numbers included, you
can turn them off in the
Format Equation
Numbers dialog.
If you don’t want section
numbers included, you
can turn them off in the
Format Equation
Numbers dialog.
Show Chapter/Section
Breaks
You can show and hide
chapter/section breaks
by clicking on the
Breaks
You can show and hide
chapter/section breaks
by clicking on the
button in Word’s toolbar.
This shows and hides
the MTEquationSection
style.
This shows and hides
the MTEquationSection
style.
The default equation number format includes a section number and an equation
number, e.g. (1.1). You can also include a chapter number if needed. The chapter
and section numbers are determined by the nearest preceding Chapter/Section
Break in your document. You insert and modify these breaks using commands
on the MathType menu. We already inserted one at the start of this document as
part of inserting the first equation number. Now we’ll change its value.
number, e.g. (1.1). You can also include a chapter number if needed. The chapter
and section numbers are determined by the nearest preceding Chapter/Section
Break in your document. You insert and modify these breaks using commands
on the MathType menu. We already inserted one at the start of this document as
part of inserting the first equation number. Now we’ll change its value.
16.
Choose the Modify Chapter/Section Break command on the MathType
menu. The location of the section break will be highlighted and the Modify
Chapter/Section Break dialog will open. Let’s assume we’re working on
Section 2 of a book, so we want the section number to be 2 and the equation
number to be 1. Choose the “Section number:” button and enter 2. The “Next”
option can be useful if your document contains several sections and you want
them numbered sequentially. (Remember that there’s no link between Word’s
sections and MathType’s chapter/section breaks; it’s up to you to associate them
by placing the breaks in the appropriate places in your document). Now click
OK. The chapter/section break will be hidden, and the equation numbers in the
document will all start with 2.
Chapter/Section Break dialog will open. Let’s assume we’re working on
Section 2 of a book, so we want the section number to be 2 and the equation
number to be 1. Choose the “Section number:” button and enter 2. The “Next”
option can be useful if your document contains several sections and you want
them numbered sequentially. (Remember that there’s no link between Word’s
sections and MathType’s chapter/section breaks; it’s up to you to associate them
by placing the breaks in the appropriate places in your document). Now click
OK. The chapter/section break will be hidden, and the equation numbers in the
document will all start with 2.
If you’ve followed these steps your document should look something like this:
We now have two basic equations:
<2.1>
2
2
cos
sin
1
θ
θ
+
=
<2.2>
2
2
cos
sin
cos 2
θ
θ
−
=
θ
Adding these two together, we obtain
2
1
2
cos
(1
cos 2 )
θ =
+
θ <2.3>
2
1
2
sin
(1
cos 2 )
θ =
−
θ <2.4>
Using <2.4> we can show that cos
2
2
1 2 sin .
θ
θ
= −
MathType’s equation numbering commands can also support three levels of
numbering, e.g. chapter, section and equation numbers. You can also control the
format of the numbers and create your own custom formats. The following
tutorial shows you how to do this; we’ll use the document we created in this
tutorial so don’t delete it!
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