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LATEX@dd: Hints
Here are some hints on how to get nicer documents.
Using compressed eps figures in a document
Two figures side by side
Convert dvi files to pdf
Colors
Source code, e.g. Matlab
How to place figures where you want them
Other fonts
Changing the margins
Change page numbering
Really large letters
Greater space between lines in tables
Not ready to give up FrameMaker?
Degrees celsius
New paragraph
Abstract in two languages
How to write technical text
Swedish and Englisg keyboard in emacs
Figures/tables inside the text
Comma instead of decimal point
- Using compressed eps figures in a document
-
If you have a large picture that takes up a lot of space on your account,
you can compress it using gzip and then include it in your
document. If you have a picture called pic.eps, you do like this:
Copy the row in pic.eps that begins with %%BoundingBox to a
new file called pic.eps.bb. Then compess the picture using the gzip
command:
gzip pic.eps
Include the picture in your LATEX document like this:
\begin{figure}[!ht]
\centering
\includegraphics[width=10cm]{pic.eps.gz}
\caption{A compressed picture.}
\end{figure}
- Two figures side by side
-
To place to figures side by side, you could use minipage like
this:
\begin{figure}
\begin{minipage}[b]{0.5\linewidth} % A minipage that covers half the page
\centering
\includegraphics[width=6cm]{bild1.eps}
\caption{En liten bild}
\end{minipage}
\hspace{0.5cm} % To get a little bit of space between the figures
\begin{minipage}[b]{0.5\linewidth}
\centering
\includegraphics[width=6cm]{bild2.eps}
\caption{En liten bild till}
\end{minipage}
\end{figure}
With minipage, you get two different figures. Another way to
do it is to use the package subfigure
(\usepackage{subfigure} in the preamble). You will then get
two subfigures inside one figure.
\begin{figure}
\centering
\subfigure[Bild a.] % caption for subfigure a
{
\label{fig:sub:a}
\includegraphics[width=4cm]{bild_a.eps}
}
\hspace{1cm}
\subfigure[Bild b.] % caption for subfigure b
{
\label{fig:sub:b}
\includegraphics[width=4cm]{bild_b.eps}
}
\caption{Bild a och b.}
\label{fig:sub} % caption for the whole figure
\end{figure}
When you use subfigure you only get one figure, i.e figure
3. When you refer to the subfigures, they are called figure 3(a) and
figure 3(b).
- Convert dvi files to pdf
-
To generate a pdf file from a dvi file, use the program
dvipdfm like this:
dvipdfm dvi_file.dvi
Read the manual!
- Colors
-
Use the package color. Here's a short example of how to use it:
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage[latin1]{inputenc} % Fixa åäö
\usepackage{color}
\definecolor{pink}{rgb}{1,0.5,0.5} % color values Red, Green, Blue
\begin{document}
\pagecolor{black} % Background color
\color{white} % Text color
I think I'm in \textcolor{rosa}{love} with \LaTeX\.
\end{document}
- Source code, e.g. Matlab
-
Use the package moreverb to include a whole text file instead
of useing \begin{verbatim}. A short example ([8] means that
the tab size is eight characters):
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage[latin1]{inputenc} % Fixa åäö
\usepackage{moreverb}
\begin{document}
And the interesting source code:
\verbatimtabinput[8]{pdesolve.m}
\end{document}
- How to place figures where you want them
-
The package here has been removed from CTAN. Instead you
should use a ! in front of the positioning parameter. I.e:
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage[latin1]{inputenc} % Fixa åäö
\usepackage{here}
\usepackage{graphicx}
\begin{document}
\begin{figure}[!h] % Will not be floating.
\begin{center}
\includegraphics{graph.eps}
\caption{Exciting graph}
\end{center}
\end{figure}
\end{document}
- Other fonts
-
The following fonts are installed at dd: palatino,
times, charter, utopia, pifont, chancery, bookman, avant, helvet(ica),
zapfchan(cery), courier, newcent(ury schoolbook) and computer
modern.
There are also special versions of palatino and times -- pspalatino -->
-- och pslatex, which also changes the font in all the formulas to -->
-- palatino or times. Take a look at the
-- HREF=Templates/rapportmall.tex>report template to see how to -->
-- use them (\usepackage{font name}).
- Change the margins
-
The easiest way to change the margins in the document is to use the
package anysize and its command \marginsize{left}{right}{top}{bottom}:
\documentclass[a4paper]{article}
\usepackage{anysize}
\marginsize{3cm}{2cm}{1cm}{1cm}
\begin{document}
Jawohl! Sommerlov!
\end{document}
- Change page numbering
-
If you want to change the page numbering anywhere in your document,
e.g. to make sure that the first page in the report is actually page
one, you can use \setcounter{page}{1} (anywhere on the page
you want to be named 1.)
- Really large letters
-
Use the package textfit and the commands
\scaletoheight{height}{text} and
\scaletowidth{width}{text}:
\documentclass[a4paper]{article}
\usepackage{textfit}
\begin{document}
\scaletoheight{3 cm}{Large!}
\scaletowidth{10 cm}{Large}\\
\scaletowidth{10 cm}{But this is the same width!}
\end{document}
- Greater space between lines in tables
-
Crowded tabels? The command \\ actually has an option. If
you, for example, write \\[.3cm] you will get a 0.3 cm space
in your table. You could also use the package tabls, \usepackage{tabls}.
- Not ready to give up FrameMaker?
-
Well, there are some ways to make your documents look better. In the
directory /users/dd/sys/http/data/latex/Templates/FrameMaker
there are some ''mif'' files that you can use. Check the
README and in latex-style.framemif for some
help. It's a kind of template that is supposed to make your document a
bit more like LATEX.
- Degrees Celsius
-
To get a nice degree character, use the packgae
\usepackage{textcomp} and the command
\textcelsius. There's also \textangle for angles.
- New paragraph
-
There are two ways of starting a new paragraph, either with an empty
line or by indenting the first line in the new paragraph (in the
LATEX source file you use an empty line as always.) If you want
every new paragrapg to start with an empty line, put the lines below before \begin{document}):
\setlength{\parskip}{12pt} % 12 pt = space between paragraphs
\setlength{\parindent}{0pt} % 0 pt = indentation
- Abstract
-
If you want your abstract in two languages, e.g. Swedish and English,
you can use \usepackage{swedish},
\usepackage{english} and then
\begin{document}
\selectlanguage{swedish}
\begin{abstract}
Detta är en kort sammanfattning.
\end{abstract}
\begin{otherlanguage}{english}
\begin{abstract}
This is a short abstract.
\end{abstract}
\end{otherlanguage}
- How to write technical text
-
Take a look at the American
Physical Society's Style and Notation Guide.
- Swedish and English keyboard in emacs
-
If you want to use å, ä, ö in your document you don't have to switch
to Swedish keyboard. Just use /A "A "O /a "a "o and let emacs
translate them with M-x iso-accents-mode.
- Figures/tables inside the text
-
Sometimes you don't want a figure or table to use the whole width of
the page. You can then use \usepackage{wrapfig} and you will
get the environments
\begin{wrapfigure}[A]{B}[C]{D} ... \end{wrapfigure}
och
\begin{wraptable}[A]{B}[C]{D} ... \end{wraptable}
där
- A - Not necessary. Number of lines to be made shorter.
- B - Necessary. Placing: r, l, i, o, R, L, I, O where
capitals=floating figure, lower case=figure HERE, r=right, l=left, i=inside,
o=outside.
- C - Not necessary. How far the figure should stretch into
the margin..
- D - Necessary. Width of figure.
- Comma instead of decimal point
-
If you write $3,14$ you will get the wrong spacing in LATEX because
the comma is not a decimal deliminator. To fix it, write the following
in the beginning of your document:
\DeclareMathSymbol{,}{\mathpunct}{letters}{"3B}
\DeclareMathSymbol{.}{\mathord}{letters}{"3B}
\DeclareMathSymbol{\decimal}{\mathord}{letters}{"3A}
And $f(x,y,z)=3.14$ will be output as "f(x, y, z) = 3,14".
More on the way...
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