If you’re using the standard classes, you need to take special action; the memoir class and the Koma-Script classes provide their own support for this — see below.
Book (by default) and report (with openright
class
option) ensure that each chapter starts on a right-hand (recto) page;
they do this by inserting a \cleardoublepage
command between
chapters (rather than a mere \clearpage
). The empty page thus
created gets to have a normal running header, which some people don’t
like.
The (excellent) fancyhdr manual covers this issue, basically
advising the creation of a command \clearemptydoublepage
:
The “obvious” thing is then to use this command to replace\let\origdoublepage\cleardoublepage \newcommand{\clearemptydoublepage}{% \clearpage {\pagestyle{empty}\origdoublepage}% }
\cleardoublepage
in a patched version of the \chapter
command.
(Make a package of your own containing a copy
of the command out of the class.) This isn’t particularly difficult,
but you can instead simply subvert \cleardoublepage
(which isn’t
often used elsewhere):
Note: this command works because\let\cleardoublepage\clearemptydoublepage
\clearemptydoublepage
uses a copy
of \cleardoublepage
: instructions on macro programming
patching techniques explain the problem and
why this is a solution.
The emptypage package does this sort of thing for you; all you need do is load the package, and it does the rest.
The KOMA-Script replacements for the
book and report classes (scrbook and
scrreprt offers class options cleardoubleempty
,
cleardoubleplain
and cleardoublestandard
(using the running page style, as normal) that control the appearance
of these empty pages. The classes also offer do-it-yourself commands
\cleardoubleempty
(etc.).
The memoir class (and the nextpage package)
provide commands \cleartooddpage
and \cleartoevenpage
,
which both take an optional argument (the first, with no argument,
being an equivalent of \cleardoublepage
). One can achieve
‘special’ effects by putting commands in the optional argument: the
\clearemptydoublepage
we’re after would be achieved by
\cleartooddpage[
\thispagestyle
{empty}
]. The
commands will also serve if you want the surreal effect of “This page
intentionally left blank” in the centre of an otherwise empty page.
This question on the Web: http://www.tex.ac.uk/cgi-bin/texfaq2html?label=reallyblank