On 2015-08-01 13:54, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
Hi Rik,

sorry for top-posting, but I’m not sure whether I understand your request.

I wonder whether the following sample points in the right direction:

    \setuppapersize[A6]
    \setuppagenumber[way=bypart, prefix=yes, prefixset=chapter]
    \startsectionblockenvironment[bodypart]
        \setuppagenumber[number=1]
    \stopsectionblockenvironment
    \startsectionblockenvironment[appendix]
        \setuppagenumber[number=1]
    \stopsectionblockenvironment
    \starttext
    \completecontent
    \startbodymatter
    \dorecurse{5}{\chapter{Chapter}\recurselevel\index{bar}}
    \stopbodymatter
    \startappendices
    \dorecurse{5}{\chapter{Appendix}\recurselevel\index{foo}}
    \title{Index}
    \placeindex
    \stopappendices
    \stoptext

Just in case it helps,

Pablo


On 08/01/2015 04:20 AM, Rik wrote:
List,

I have a book with frontmatter, bodymatter, and backmatter. The 
frontmatter is pagenumbered with lc roman, and the bodymatter and 
backmatter are numbered, all by block.

The backmatter contain a glossary, pagenotes, bibliography, and an 
index. In addition to the frontmatter and the bodymatter, both the 
glossary and the pagenotes contain items that are indexed.

I need to distinguish pagenumbers that appear in the index so that the 
reader can identify where in the book the page is located. For the 
frontmatter, that is not a problem. For items that appear in the 
bodymatter or backmatter, however, page numbers are not unique.

One method that has been suggested is to prefix the pagenumber displayed 
in the index with a mark to indicate that the page is in the backmatter, 
or to italicize it, or to use an alternate font. I have looked at the 
defineconversionset and defineprocessor documentation and find no way to 
mark index entries appropriately.

Can anyone suggest a way to do this, or some other method? Perhaps a 
pagecommand that compares the register item real page number to the 
highest real page number of the body? I would prefer a solution that 
does not require changing the register commands (\index) in the text.

Continuous numbering across the frontmatter, bodymatter, and backmatter 
is not wanted, although as a last resort I might be able to argue for 
continuous numbering in the bodymatter and backmatter.
Thank you, Pablo. That does meet the requirements as stated, but having the chapter number as a prefix for the body entries is overly verbose and will not pass muster. (Failure of my specifications.)

I have found a solution, however. By placing these in the environment:
\defineprocessor[Back][style=slanted,right=n]
\defineprocessor[Front][style=normal]
\def\Where{Front}
\def\Index{\index[\Where->]}
And this at the start of the backmatter:
\def\Where{Back}
I can index items with \Index{item} and the value of \Where when the entry is processed will be used. This meets the requirement that no change to the indexing is required in the text (except to change \index to \Index), and I can further distinguish notes from glossary entries if needed. I could even eliminate that last change by defining my own register Index and using \def\index{\Index[\Where->] (and an appropriate \placeregister).

I still haven't played with this a lot, so I don't know yet if it will handle all the optional bits of register entries, but it should suffice for my current needs.

--
Rik