+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | titlepage | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+ Abbreviation: ã|\tpã% Parameters: ã|noneã% ã|Description:ã% By convention, a title page is a display page, differing from body pages. It usually has sinkage (extra vertical space before the title), a centered title (in bold or larger type), and a blind folio (where the page is numbered but the number is not printed). It may also have special text in the footing. By default, the first page of any paper is a title page in TEXT1, although it can be suppressed by \notitlepage. Furthermore, title pages can be added anywhere in a paper using \titlepage. Since the title page usually receives different treatment from body pages, there is separate markup for it. By default, the title page adds 1 inch to the top margin and does not print a running foot line at the bottom of the page. The next page after a title page in TEXT1 is always assumed to be a \notitlepage. ã|Example:ã% Some applications have more than one page in the document which are not to carry a running top title. For example, if you want a chapter to always print without a running top title, you could add \titlepage to the \chapterformat markup: \chapterformat{\numberingstyle{1} \titleformat{\dumpinsertseject \titlepage \cl{\twelvept\bd Chapter \chapternumber} \cl{\twelvept\bd \chaptertitle} \vs{1\bl} \setsubheadanumber{0} \setsubheadbnumber{0} \setsubheadcnumber{0} \setsubheaddnumber{0}} \incontents{yes}} ã|Notes:ã% Use the \titlepageformat to change the defaults on the title page.