Page Numbers /text/swriter/guide/pagenumbers.xhp page numbers;inserting/defining/formatting page styles;page numbering starting page numbers formatting;page numbers defining;starting page numbers inserting;page numbers styles;page numbers mw inserted six index entriesmw added "styles;" Page Numbers In Writer, a page number is a field that you can insert into your text. To Insert Page Numbers Choose Insert - Fields - Page Number to insert a page number at the current cursor position. If you see the text "Page number" instead of the number, choose View - Field names. However, these fields will change position when you add or remove text. So it is best to insert the page number field into a header or footer that has the same position and that is repeated on every page. Choose Insert - Header - (name of page style) or Insert - Footer - (name of page style) to add a header or footer to all pages with the current page style. To Start With a Defined Page Number Now you want some more control on page numbers. You are writing a text document that should start with page number 12. Click into the first paragraph of your document. Choose Format - Paragraph - Text flow. In the Breaks area, enable Insert. Enable With Page Style just to be able to set the new Page number. Click OK. The new page number is an attribute of the first paragraph of the page. To Format the Page Number Style You want roman page numbers running i, ii, iii, iv, and so on. Double-click directly before the page number field. You see the Edit Fields dialog. Select a number format and click OK. Using Different Page Number Styles You need some pages with the roman numbering style, followed by the remaining pages in another style. In Writer, you will need different page styles. The first page style has a footer with a page number field formatted for roman numbers. The following page style has a footer with a page number field formatted in another look. Both page styles must be separated by a page break. In Writer, you can have automatic page breaks and manually inserted page breaks. An automatic page break appears at the end of a page when the page style has a different "next style". For example, the "First Page" page style has "Default" as the next style. To see this, you may press Command+TF11 to open the Styles and Formatting window, click the Page Styles icon, right-click the First Page entry. Choose Modify from the context menu. On the Organizer tab, you can see the "next style". A manually inserted page break can be applied without or with a change of page styles. If you just press Ctrl+Enter, you apply a page break without a change of styles. If you choose Insert - Manual break, you can insert a page break without or with a change of style or with a change of page number. It depends on your document what is best: to use a manually inserted page break between page styles, or to use an automatic change. If you just need one title page with a different style than the other pages, you can use the automatic method: To Apply a Different Page Style to the First Page Click into the first page of your document. Choose Format - Styles and Formatting. In the Styles and Formatting window, click the Page Styles icon. Double-click the "First Page" style. Now your title page has the style "First Page", and the next pages automatically have the "Default" style. You can now for example insert a footer for the "Default" page atyle only, or insert footers in both page styles, but with differently formatted page number fields. To Apply a Manually Inserted Page Style Change Click at the start of the first paragraph on the page where a different page style will be applied. Choose Insert - Manual Break. You see the Insert Break dialog. In the Style list box, select a page style. You may set a new page number, too. Click OK. The selected page style will be used from the current paragraph to the next page break with style. You may need to create the new page style first.