The package nopageno will suppress page numbers in a whole document.
To suppress page numbers from a single page, use
\
thispagestyle{empty}
somewhere within the text of the
page. (Note that \
maketitle
and \
chapter
both use
\
thispagestyle
internally, so you need to call it after you've
called them.)
To suppress page numbers from a sequence of pages, you may use
\
pagestyle{empty}
at the start of the sequence, and restore
the original page style at the end. Unfortunately, you still have to
use \
thispagestyle
after any \
maketitle
or \
chapter
command.
In the memoir class, the troublesome commands (\
maketitle
,
\
chapter
, etc.) invoke their own page style
(title
, chapter
, etc.), which you may
redefine using the class's own techniques to be equivalent to
"empty
". The KOMA-script classes have
commands that contain the page style to be used, so one might say:
\renewcommand*{\titlepagestyle}{empty}
An alternative (in all classes) is to use the rather delightful
\
pagenumbering{gobble}
; this has the simple effect that any
attempt to print a page number produces nothing, so there's no issue
about preventing any part of LaTeX from printing the number.
However, the \
pagenumbering
command does have the side effect that
it resets the page number (to 1), which may be undesirable.
The scrpage2 package separates out the representation from the resetting; so one can say
to have the same effect as the\renewcommand*{\pagemark}{}
gobble
trick, without
resetting the page number.
This question on the Web: http://www.tex.ac.uk/cgi-bin/texfaq2html?label=nopageno