Aus wordlike.pdf von Jürgen Fenn:
"3 Implementation
3.1 Option msword
Default settings are provided by option msword which tries to resemble the usual layout supplied
by Microsoft Word.4
Code:
1 \DeclareOption{msword}{
3.1.1 Word-like section numbering and table of contents
We start by redefining the depth of section numbering both in the document and in the table of
contents. All five sectioning levels are supported and appear in the table of contents by default.
Code:
2 \setcounter{secnumdepth}{5}%
3 \setcounter{tocdepth}{5}%
Then, the look of the table of contents is modified. First, the dots that appear between section
headings and page numbers in the TOC are re-defined so that they are typeset closer to one another:
Code:
4 \renewcommand{\@dotsep}{1}
Now, the appearance of TOC entries is slightly modified.
Code:
5 \renewcommand\l@section{\@dottedtocline{1}{0em}{1.5em}}
6 \renewcommand*\l@subsection{\@dottedtocline{2}{1.5em}{2.3em}}
7 \renewcommand*\l@subsubsection{\@dottedtocline{3}{3.8em}{3.2em}}
8 \renewcommand*\l@paragraph{\@dottedtocline{4}{7.0em}{4.1em}}
9 \renewcommand*\l@subparagraph{\@dottedtocline{5}{10em}{5em}}
3.1.2 Word-like section headings
Microsoft Word pursues a completely different approach to typesetting section headings than La-
TeX does. All headings are typeset using bold sansserif fonts, except for paragraphs and subparagraphs.
Code:
10 \renewcommand{\section}{\@startsection%
11 {section}%
12 {0}%
13 {0em}%
14 {-\baselineskip}%
15 {0.5\baselineskip}%
16 {\bfseries\LARGE\sffamily}}%
17 \renewcommand{\subsection}{\@startsection%
18 {subsection}%
19 {1}%
20 {0em}%
21 {-\baselineskip}%
22 {0.5\baselineskip}%
23 {\bfseries\Large\itshape\sffamily}}%
24 \renewcommand{\subsubsection}{\@startsection%
25 {subsubsection}%
26 {2}%
27 {0em}%
28 {-\baselineskip}%
... u.s.w.
So etwas bräuchte ich vielleicht dann auch für \chapter{}
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