\pagenumbering
¶Synopsis:
\pagenumbering{number-style}
Specifies the style of page numbers, and resets the page number. The numbering style is reflected on the page, and also in the table of contents and other page references. This declaration has global scope so its effect is not stopped by an end of group such as a closing brace or an end of environment.
By default, LaTeX numbers pages starting at 1, using Arabic numerals.
The argument number-style is one of the following (see
also \alph \Alph \arabic \roman \Roman \fnsymbol
: Printing counters).
arabic
Arabic numerals: 1, 2, …
roman
lowercase Roman numerals: i, ii, …
Roman
uppercase Roman numerals: I, II, …
alph
lowercase letters: a, b, … If you have more than 26 pages then you get ‘LaTeX Error: Counter too large’.
Alph
uppercase letters: A, B, … If you have more than 26 pages then you get ‘LaTeX Error: Counter too large’.
gobble
no page number is output, though the number is still reset. References to that page also are blank.
This setting does not work with the popular package hyperref
,
so to omit page numbers you may want to instead use
\pagestyle{empty}
or \thispagestyle{empty}
.
If you want to typeset the page number in some other way, or change
where the page number appears on the page, see \pagestyle
(in short: use the fancyhdr
package). The list above of
LaTeX’s built-in numbering styles cannot be extended.
Traditionally, if a document has front matter—preface, table of
contents, etc.—then it is numbered with lowercase Roman
numerals. The main matter of a document uses arabic. LaTeX
implements this, by providing explicit commands for the different parts
(see \frontmatter
, \mainmatter
, \backmatter
).
As an explicit example, before the ‘Main’ section the pages are
numbered ‘a’, etc. Starting on the page containing the
\pagenumbering
call in that section, the pages are numbered
‘1’, etc.
\begin{document}\pagenumbering{alph} ... \section{Main}\pagenumbering{arabic} ...
If you want to change the value of the page number, then you
manipulate the page
counter (see Counters).