In a master thesis, I need to refer to a model described elsewhere, from a section title, like
\section{Analysis of model X}
One way of referring to a model is to create a new counter, and then write
\section{Analysis of \cref{grandmodelofeverything}}
But now hyperref will complain because of invalid token, and it does not look good in the TOC either, especially since the titles of the sections the describe the models are more descriptive than
\section{Model 1}
They are currently like
\section{Adding the effect from Y processes}
Do I need to invent semi-descriptive long names like "The model by Authors with this modification" or can I live with these quirks?
hyperrefpart is just a detail. The question is more about appropriate headers. I guess that thehyperrefwarning can be interpreted as "this is bad style" [putting reference in header]. – user877329 Jul 22 '15 at 14:53