<div style="FONT-FAMILY: Arial; COLOR: rgb(0,0,0); FONT-SIZE: 12px"><DIV> Hi, Alexandra. I think this is what Robert Lauriston has been saying, also.</DIV><DIV> </DIV><DIV>Both the formats you use are picked up in your FrameMaker TOC for your PDF output, (assuming you are single-sourcing to PDF also), correct?</DIV><DIV> </DIV><DIV>This sounds like a great solution. Very elegant.</DIV><DIV> </DIV><DIV>--Nancy</DIV><DIV> </DIV><DIV> </DIV><DIV style="MARGIN: 5px 0px; BORDER-TOP: #bcbcbc 1px solid"></DIV><SPAN style="FONT-FAMILY: arial; COLOR: #000000; FONT-SIZE: 12px">On 03/01/13, <SPAN>Alexandra Duffy<ADuffy@vectorworks.net></SPAN> wrote:</SPAN><DIV> </DIV><DIV style="FONT-FAMILY: arial; COLOR: #000000; FONT-SIZE: 12px"><DIV class=WordSection1><P class=MsoNormal>Hi Nancy,</P><P class=MsoNormal>Here’s how we do this – we have two heading styles for all our major headings. Level 1 starts a new page in RH, and Level1nopage looks exactly the same but does not have the Pagination option selected in the RH mapping. Similarly, we have Level2 and Level2nopage, and so on. Our Level 4 doesn’t need to start a new page in RH, so we don’t have dual styles for it.</P><P class=MsoNormal>This sounds complicated, but it’s really easy. You just go through your FM files and apply the “nopage” equivalent to the sections that shouldn’t start a new page.</P><P class=MsoNormal>I hope this helps!</P><P class=MsoNormal><BR>Alexandra Duffy</P><P class=MsoNormal>Lead Technical Writer</P><P class=MsoNormal>Nemetschek Vectorworks, Inc.</P></DIV></DIV></div>