Heh… It is also possible with Word.
In Writer, there are several options involved. First - a simple case when you only need one (front) page to have different header or footer (the page numbers are in special parts of page named headers and footers). When you want only that, you simply go to page properties, enable relevant page part (header/footer) by checking boxes on corresponding tabs, and also uncheck Same content on first page
. Since you would have different headers/footers for the first and the rest pages, you would then be able to put page number field to the second page (which will, naturally, be repeated further), while not on first page.
But in more involved cases, when you have several leading pages with one style (e.g., table of content), after which go pages with a different style, you would need to use a feature conveniently named page styles
. Each page style in Writer has its own full set of formatting (including size, orientation, margins, background, headers and footers). You define (create) required page styles, and then tell Writer that starting with this or that paragraph, you need this or that page style.
So, your procedure would look like this:
- Open
Styles
(F11
).
- At the top of the popped-up sidebar, click on
Page Styles
button.
- Right-click in the styles list area, and choose
New...
(there’s also a menu for that in the right part of toolbar where you have chosen Page Styles
).
- In the
Page Styles
dialog, on Organizer
tab, define the name for the new style (e.g., “ToC”).
- Define the other properties for the page on the other tabs, like size or margins, and, if you don’t need headers/footers, make sure you don’t check relevant checkboxes. If you need them, but you need a different numbering (like Romans), then select relevant numbering style in
Layout Settings
section on Page
tab (and don’t forget to turn headers and/or footers on, to put corresponding field there later).
- It is important to select numbering here, and not to do that in page number fields, because numbering settings of the page style are taken into account later when you create different cross-references and tables.
- After you have defined and saved your new style, you need to assign it to a part of your document. Page style is used starting from a paragraph you assigned it to, till another paragraph that has another page style assigned. So, go to the very first paragraph that you want to have the ToC page style, and go to that paragraph’s properties (menu
Format
→Paragraph...
), Text Flow
tab, and select Breaks
→Insert
→Page
→Before
→With page style:
→"ToC". Also optionally set the starting page number.
- This will set all the following pages until the end of the document to have this page style, unless you have other paragraphs with page styles below. That’s OK for now.
- Now go to the very first paragraph of your normal text (that needs to be on differently-styled pages), and repeat the step 6, this time choosing “Default style” page style, or whatever style you could have created for this text run.
- Now you customize the headers/footers of each part of your document, and they will have different header/footer content.
You also can set different left/right pages, create differently-oriented pages, and in general, be as flexible and creative as required using page styles to make your document look as you need.