Page Heading

The main heading tag is a pound sign followed by a exclamation mark (#!) and is used to specify a page heading different from the page title. Notice that the title of this page is "Subheadings and Outlines" while the heading above is "Page Heading."



Heading 1

Subheading 1

You can divide sections into smaller units with subheadings. To create a subheading use two leading percent signs (##) instead of one. This concept can be extended up to five levels deep (#####).

Third Level Subheading

Fourth Level Subheading
Fifth Level Subheading

Subheading 2

For brevity, the default table of contents lists only major headings. You can choose a longer, more detailed document outline (as seen on this page) by adding the "%OUTLINE" tag with the switch "long."

Heading 2

It is also possible to suppress the table of contents altogether by using the "%OUTLINE" tag with the "none" switch. This format is useful when you want to use headings but don't want extra elements added to the page.

Heading 3

This is the last section. This is the last section. This is the last section. This is the last section. This is the last section. This is the last section. This is the last section. This is the last section. This is the last section. This is the last section. This is the last section. This is the last section.


  Created: June 1, 1996  Modified: January 20, 1997
  Version: MTX 1.5 User's Manual / Copyright 1996 by Richard Rathe
   Author: Richard Rathe / rrathe@dean.med.ufl.edu
 Location: http://www.med.ufl.edu/medinfo/mtx/docs/subhead.html