Book Image

LaTeX Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Stefan Kottwitz
Book Image

LaTeX Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Stefan Kottwitz

Overview of this book

The second edition of LaTeX Cookbook offers improved and additional examples especially for users in science and academia, with a focus on new packages for creating graphics with LaTeX. This edition also features an additional chapter on ChatGPT use to improve content, streamline code, and automate tasks, thereby saving time. This book is a practical guide to utilizing the capabilities of modern document classes and exploring the functionalities of the newest LaTeX packages. Starting with familiar document types like articles, books, letters, posters, leaflets, and presentations, it contains detailed tutorials for refining text design, adjusting fonts, managing images, creating tables, and optimizing PDFs. It also covers elements such as the bibliography, glossary, and index. You’ll learn to create graphics directly within LaTeX, including diagrams and plots, and explore LaTeX’s application across various fields like mathematics, physics, chemistry, and computer science. The book’s website offers online compilable code, an example gallery, and supplementary information related to the book, including the author’s LaTeX forum, where you can get personal support. By the end of this book, you’ll have the skills to optimize productivity through practical demonstrations of effective LaTeX usage in diverse scenarios.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Positioning tables

Tables can get quite big. If there’s insufficient free space on a page to accommodate the table, that table will be pushed to the next page. This would leave white space at the end of the page. You could manually move some text to compensate. But imagine having a large document with many tables; manually moving images to balance page breaks can become cumbersome. Fortunately, LaTeX offers an automated solution for managing this.

How to do it...

This is the standard way of including tables:

  1. Use a table environment.
  2. Center the content, if desired, using the \centering command.
  3. Write a caption.
  4. Add a label for cross-referencing.
  5. Write the table content using a tabular environment.

A typical code sequence looks like this:

\begin{table}[htbp!]  \centering  \caption{A description}  \label{tab:name}  \begin{tabular}{...}    ...  \end{tabular}\end{table}
...