I don't think that it's possible to do in the way you want. CellLabel
s can only be text, while both CellDingbat
and CellFrameLabels
can be arbitrary cell expressions.
Both CellDingbat -> ...
and CellFrameLabels -> {{...,None},{None,None}}
work if the cell is only a single line long. But do not automatically resize for multiple line cells (at least as far as I could tell). For example:
Cell["Abcdefg", "Text",
CellFrame->{{0, 1}, {0, 2}},
CellMargins->{{30, 24}, {6, 6}},
CellFrameMargins->0,
CellFrameColor->RGBColor[0, 0, 1],
CellFrameLabels->{{Cell[" Definition 1.1 ", "Text",
CellFrame -> {{2, 0}, {0, 2}}, CellFrameMargins -> 0], None}, {None, None}},
CellFrameLabelMargins->0,
Background->RGBColor[0, 1, 1]]
Putting a CellFrameLabel on the top does not have this problem, but I don't know how to align it to the left...
Cell["Abcde", "Text",
CellFrame->{{1, 1}, {0, 2}},
CellMargins->{{30, 24}, {6, 6}},
CellFrameMargins->0,
CellFrameColor->RGBColor[0, 0, 1],
CellFrameLabels->{{None, None}, {None,
Cell[" Definition 1.1 ", "Text",
CellFrame -> {{2, 2}, {0, 2}}, CellFrameMargins -> 0]}},
CellFrameLabelMargins->0,
Background->RGBColor[0, 1, 1]]
I think that maybe the best looking solution would be to include the "Definition ch.def:" in the cell contents.
Cell[TextData[{
Cell["Definition 1.1: ", Editable->False, Selectable->False, Deletable->False],
"Abcdefg"}], "Text",
CellFrame->{{1, 1}, {0, 2}},
CellMargins->{{30, 24}, {6, 6}},
CellFrameColor->RGBColor[0, 0, 1],
Background->RGBColor[0, 1, 1]]
Make it so that it's not deletable by the average user and it is probably almost as good as a cell(frame)label. It can include counters so that it automatically shows the correct numbering. The only problem is that it does not appear automatically, but if you just copy a pre-existing cell, then that's not too much of a problem.
Edit: Adding an input alias that creates the non-deletable counter
First we get the current input aliases,
oldAliases = InputAliases /. Options[EvaluationNotebook[], InputAliases];
then replace any existing alias EscdefEsc with our new one:
newAliases =
Append[DeleteCases[oldAliases, "def" -> _],
"def" -> Cell[TextData[
RowBox[StyleBox[#, FontWeight->"Bold", FontColor->Blue]&/@{"Definition ",
CounterBox["Chapter"], ".", CounterBox["Definition"], ": "}]],(*"Text",*)
Editable -> False, Selectable -> False, Deletable -> False]];
SetOptions[EvaluationNotebook[], InputAliases -> newAliases]
Since I don't have your style sheet, I need to set a couple of counters:
CellPrint[Cell["Setting the counters", "Text",
CounterAssignments -> {{"Chapter", 2}, {"Definition", 3}}]]
Now I can use the alias in an existing cell - it inherits the styling of the parent cell (unless otherwise specified):
Another option is to make a palette to go with your stylesheet. This would be useful since there's only a limited number of MenuCommandKey values that you can use for your new styles (n.b. overwriting the default ones will just confuse people). See this answer for an example of such a palette.