Determine up to which level the sections shall have a section number. For sections below this level, the section heading comprises the section title, only, without any section number.
Determine up to which level the sections shall be listed in the table of contents.
HTML reports can be split into several files to make it possible that larger reports are opened faster in the web browser. To do so enable the option "Divide report into several files". If you have chosen this option then there are two further settings, which control how the splitting is performed
The splitting of an HTML report is done along the chapter structure. In the drop down list "Create a separate file for each chapter/section up to level" you can determine up to which level each section is put into a separate HTML file. Enabling the option "Combine top-level chapters and first contained section in a single file" will cause each top-level chapter to be put together into a single file with its first section. This is useful if the top-level chapters do not contain any text on their own except for the heading.
The usefulness of a certain chapter level being used for splitting an HTML report depends on the distribution of contents over the chapter structure. If the performance is the main reason for splitting the HTML report, then the number of images appearing in each of the resulting HTML snippets is the relevant indicator for choosing the chapter level.
The following diagram illustrates the effect of the different HTML splitting options by showing the resulting HTML snippets for a fix project using different settings:
Set the image format which is to be used to integrate plan graphics into a report. SVG is a vector-based format and offers thus higher quality, especially it is zoomable without loss of quality. However, since SVG is not supported by all browsers - at least not without installing an extra plugin -, the pixel-based format PNG can be used as an alternative, which is well-supported by all browsers.