Latex: Difference between revisions

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==Tables==
==Tables==
===Multirow and Multicolumns===
===Multirow and Multicolumns===
<code>\multirowcell{5}{Dataset A}</code>
===Newlines===
===Newlines===
[https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/2441/how-to-add-a-forced-line-break-inside-a-table-cell stackexchange line break in table cell]   
[https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/2441/how-to-add-a-forced-line-break-inside-a-table-cell stackexchange line break in table cell]   

Revision as of 15:57, 15 December 2020

Typeset all of your papers using latex.


Installation

No Install

Use Overleaf to create latex documents in a web browser.

Partial Install

Download MikTex. It includes the TeXworks editor and will download packages as you use them. This will not take up as much disk space as a full install.

Full Install

Windows

Download TexLive. This is several gigabytes since it includes all the popular LaTex packages and takes a while to install. You'll also need an editor. I recommend installing Atom with the following packages:

  • latex for calling the TexLive compiler
  • language-latex for syntax highlighting
  • pdf-view for viewing the compiled pdf.

Linux

sudo apt install texlive-full

Compile tex documents with

pdflatex [mydocument.tex]

Usage

Fancy Math Font

See this answer.


% Use mathbb for the set of reals R or the set of complex numbers C
% Requires amsfonts
\mathbb{R}

Spaces

See Reference

Spaces in mathematical mode.
 
\begin{align*}
f(x) =& x^2\! +3x\! +2 \\
f(x) =& x^2+3x+2 \\
f(x) =& x^2\, +3x\, +2 \\
f(x) =& x^2\: +3x\: +2 \\
f(x) =& x^2\; +3x\; +2 \\
f(x) =& x^2\ +3x\ +2 \\
f(x) =& x^2\quad +3x\quad +2 \\
f(x) =& x^2\qquad +3x\qquad +2
\end{align*}

Units

For spacing between elements, use \hspace or \vspace.

\hspace[4mm]

Units in Latex
You can specify spacing in pt, mm, cm, ex, em, bp, dd, pc, in

Indents

Section

\hspace*{5mm}\begin{minipage}{\dimexpr\textwidth-5mm}
   Indented Section
\end{minipage}


Sections

Numbering

To change the section numbering from numbers to letters, add the following:

% Changes sections to use capital letters
\renewcommand{\thesection}{\Alph{section}}

% Changes subsections to use lowercase letters
\renewcommand{\thesubsection}{\thesection.\alph{subsection}}

Programming

Latex is a turing complete language.
You can use if statements and for loops in latex.

Custom Commands

You can define your own commands using \newcommand

Custom Operators

Latex packages like amsmath come with operators such as \sin and \log.
To get normal text for custom functions like arcsin, use \operatorname{arcsin}.
Below are some potentially useful math operators.

\DeclareMathOperator{\Tr}{Tr}
\DeclareMathOperator{\VCdim}{VCdim}
\DeclareMathOperator{\sign}{sign}
\DeclareMathOperator{\rank}{rank}
\DeclareMathOperator*{\argmin}{argmin}
\DeclareMathOperator*{\argmax}{argmax}
Notes
  • Adding * puts subscript elements beneath the operator.

Programming

For Each Loops

\foreach [count=\i] \j in {A,B,...,H}{
Element \i~is \j\\
}

Page Layout

There are many packages which adjust the page layout.
You can use the package wordlike for a MS Word layout.

Font

Font size
\documentclass[12pt]{article}
Font type
  • Times New Roman - \usepackage{mathptmx}

Tables

Multirow and Multicolumns

\multirowcell{5}{Dataset A}

Newlines

stackexchange line break in table cell
linebreak in multirow

To have a newline in a cell, you can use the makecell package.
\makecell{Some really \\ longer text}.
To make this align left: \makecell[l]{Some really \\ longer text}

For multirow cells, you can use \multirowcell{5}{Numbers\\from\\ 1 to 5}.
By default, this will align center. You can make it align left: \multirowcell{2}[0pt][l]{Number\\ Letter}.

Enumerate

Enumerate is used to make lists

Change the label

Reference
Add the option for the labels:

  • label=(\alph*) for letters
  • label=(\Alph*) for upper-case letters
  • label=(\roman*) for roman numerals.
  • label=(\arabic*) for numbers
Example
\usepackage{enumitem}
#...
\begin{enumerate}[label=(\alph*)]
\item an apple
\item a banana
\item a carrot
\item a durian
\end{enumerate}

Other Options

  • font=\bfseries for bold labels
  • align=left left align labels

Useful Commands

A list of potentially useful commands.
You can paste the following an a Macros.tex file and \input{Macros} in your main tex file.

\newcommand{\degree}{\ensuremath{^{\circ}} }
\newcommand{\etal}{{\em et al. }}
\newcommand{\ceil}[1]{{\lceil #1 \rceil}}
\newcommand{\floor}[1]{{\lfloor #1 \rfloor}}

Bibliography (Bibtex)

How to do references in Latex.
Bibtex Examples

Citations

Use \cite or some variant to cite references.
Natbib reference sheet

# Defaults to author-year citations
\usepackage{natbib}
# For numerical citations
\usepackage[numbers]{natbib}

# If using author-year citations
\citet{jon90} ⇒ Jones et al. (1990)
\citep{jon90} ⇒ (Jones et al., 1990)
\citep[see][]{jon90} ⇒ (see Jones et al., 1990)

# If using numerical citations
\citet{jon90} ⇒ Jones et al. [21]
\citep{jon90} ⇒ [21]
\citep[see][]{jon90} ⇒ [see 21]

Case of Titles

If you do not want lower case titles, you can change your .bst file by commenting out the portion which alters the case.

FUNCTION {format.title}
{ 
  %title empty$
  %  { "" }
  %  { title "t" change.case$ }
  %if$
  title
  %add.link
}

Tikz

Tikz is used to draw graphs and other shapes

Drawing over images

\begin{tikzpicture}
    \node[anchor=south west,inner sep=0] (image) at (0,0) {
    \includegraphics[width=.9\linewidth]{my_image.png}
    };<br />
    \begin{scope}[x={(image.south east)},y={(image.north west)}]
        \draw[black,ultra thick,rounded corners] (0.0,0.1) rectangle (0.3,0.5);
        \draw[red,ultra thick,rounded corners] (0.5,0.1) rectangle (0.8,0.5);
        % \draw[help lines,xstep=.1,ystep=.1] (0,0) grid (1,1);
        % \foreach \x in {0,1,...,9} { \node [anchor=north] at (\x/10,0) {0.\x}; }
        % \foreach \y in {0,1,...,9} { \node [anchor=east] at (0,\y/10) {0.\y}; }
    \end{scope}
\end{tikzpicture}

Algorithms

How to insert pseudocode into your Latex document.

See algorithmc vs algorithmcx vs algorithm2e
Also Wikibooks: LaTeX/Algorithms for several examples

algorithmc

The algorithms bundle

algorithmcx

The algorithmicx package

algorithm2e

See https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Algorithms#Typesetting_using_the_algorithm2e_package

\usepackage[linesnumbered,ruled]{algorithm2e}

\begin{algorithm}[H]
 \KwData{this text}
 \KwResult{how to write algorithm with \LaTeX2e }
 initialization\;
 \While{not at end of this document}{
  read current\;
  \eIf{understand}{
   go to next section\;
   current section becomes this one\;
   }{
   go back to the beginning of current section\;
  }
 }
 \caption{How to write algorithms}
\end{algorithm}

Document Class

Overleaf Writing your own class
Document classes are .cls files which provide a layout for your document. By writing your own document class, you can ensure a consistent layout across multiple latex documents. You can also encapsulate commands and macros or package requirements within your document class.

Notes

See Wikibooks: LaTeX/Document Structure for a list of common document classes and options.


Examples

Below is a basic example of a latex document

Article Example
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
\usepackage{datetime}
\usepackage{lipsum}<br />
\usepackage[numbers]{natbib}

\newdateformat{monthyear}{%
  \monthname[\THEMONTH] \THEYEAR}

\title{My Main Title\\
\large A Subtitle}
\author{My Name}
\date{\monthyear\today}

\begin{document}

\maketitle

\begin{abstract}
    \lipsum[1]
\end{abstract}

\section{Introduction}
\lipsum[2-4]


\bibliographystyle{plain}
\bibliography{thebib}

\end{document}

Exporting

See https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Export_To_Other_Formats#Convert_to_image_formats.

Images

On Linux, you can convert PDF files to PNG files using:

pdftoppm paper.pdf paper-page -r 300 -png
  • -r specifies the DPI. Default is 150.

Resources