On 29. mai 2010 01:04, george legge wrote:
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Julien Rioux
jri...@physics.utoronto.ca mailto:jri...@physics.utoronto.ca wrote:
Hi,
I am not completely clear on what you want to accomplish, but you might
want to have a look at the sidecap package [1]. I wrote a
On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 12:11 AM, Helge Hafting helge.haft...@hist.nowrote:
A figure, (including the caption) can be shifted left or right if you want
to. Here is one way:
1.Insert the figure float.
2.The first thing inside this float should be horizontal space.
Use a negative length to
On 29. mai 2010 01:04, george legge wrote:
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Julien Rioux
jri...@physics.utoronto.ca mailto:jri...@physics.utoronto.ca wrote:
Hi,
I am not completely clear on what you want to accomplish, but you might
want to have a look at the sidecap package [1]. I wrote a
On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 12:11 AM, Helge Hafting helge.haft...@hist.nowrote:
A figure, (including the caption) can be shifted left or right if you want
to. Here is one way:
1.Insert the figure float.
2.The first thing inside this float should be horizontal space.
Use a negative length to
On 29. mai 2010 01:04, george legge wrote:
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Julien Rioux
> wrote:
Hi,
I am not completely clear on what you want to accomplish, but you might
want to have a look at the sidecap package [1]. I wrote a
On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 12:11 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:
> A figure, (including the caption) can be shifted left or right if you want
> to. Here is one way:
> 1.Insert the figure float.
> 2.The first thing inside this float should be horizontal space.
> Use a negative length
On 28/05/2010 7:04 PM, george legge wrote:
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Julien Riouxjri...@physics.utoronto.cawrote:
Hi,
I am not completely clear on what you want to accomplish, but you might want
to have a look at the sidecap package [1]. I wrote a minimalistic module to
use the package in
On Mon, May 31, 2010 at 10:57 PM, Julien Rioux
jri...@physics.utoronto.cawrote:
On 28/05/2010 7:04 PM, george legge wrote:
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Julien Riouxjri...@physics.utoronto.ca
wrote:
Hi,
I am not completely clear on what you want to accomplish, but you might
want
to
On 28/05/2010 7:04 PM, george legge wrote:
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Julien Riouxjri...@physics.utoronto.cawrote:
Hi,
I am not completely clear on what you want to accomplish, but you might want
to have a look at the sidecap package [1]. I wrote a minimalistic module to
use the package in
On Mon, May 31, 2010 at 10:57 PM, Julien Rioux
jri...@physics.utoronto.cawrote:
On 28/05/2010 7:04 PM, george legge wrote:
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Julien Riouxjri...@physics.utoronto.ca
wrote:
Hi,
I am not completely clear on what you want to accomplish, but you might
want
to
On 28/05/2010 7:04 PM, george legge wrote:
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Julien Riouxwrote:
Hi,
I am not completely clear on what you want to accomplish, but you might want
to have a look at the sidecap package [1]. I wrote a minimalistic module to
use the package
On Mon, May 31, 2010 at 10:57 PM, Julien Rioux
wrote:
> On 28/05/2010 7:04 PM, george legge wrote:
>
>> On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Julien Rioux> >wrote:
>> Hi,
>> I am not completely clear on what you want to accomplish, but you might
Am 30.05.2010 05:45, schrieb george legge:
Thank you Uwe. Overhang is exactly what I need.
However, I do not want wrapping, and overhang seems to be offered only by
Wrap Float.
I don't think a plain Figure Float recognizes overhang.
Is there an easy way to insert an overhang command into a
Is there an easy way to insert an overhang command into a Figure Float?
You only need to specify a width for your image that is wider than the page
or column width. Use for example a width of 110 column%. Attached is an
example where I have done this for a box.
regards Uwe
Thank you
Am 30.05.2010 23:22, schrieb george legge:
Thank you Uwe, but that merely enlarges the image and extends it into the
margin.
It does not MOVE the image. An overhang moves the image across into the
margin which is what I need.
This is against usual typesetting rules and therefore not
This is against usual typesetting rules and therefore not supported by
LaTeX. I showed you 2 tricks to overcome this and I don't see other ways.
But you should have a very, very important reason to print something in the
page margin. Because in case that you print your document by a printing
Sorry Uwe, I forgot to add that the geometry package allows me to set up
exactly what I need in the way of margins.
It can set:
paperwidth = inner + width + outer [I am calling them inner and outer
rather than left and right, because it is double sided]
where inner and outer are true margins,
Am 31.05.2010 03:06, schrieb george legge:
It is the outer edge of this (marginparsep + marginparwidth) region which I
attempted to justify my figures to.
My requirement was that the outer edge of a figure line up with the outer
edge of the marginpara,
I expect that you need low-level TeX
Am 30.05.2010 05:45, schrieb george legge:
Thank you Uwe. Overhang is exactly what I need.
However, I do not want wrapping, and overhang seems to be offered only by
Wrap Float.
I don't think a plain Figure Float recognizes overhang.
Is there an easy way to insert an overhang command into a
Is there an easy way to insert an overhang command into a Figure Float?
You only need to specify a width for your image that is wider than the page
or column width. Use for example a width of 110 column%. Attached is an
example where I have done this for a box.
regards Uwe
Thank you
Am 30.05.2010 23:22, schrieb george legge:
Thank you Uwe, but that merely enlarges the image and extends it into the
margin.
It does not MOVE the image. An overhang moves the image across into the
margin which is what I need.
This is against usual typesetting rules and therefore not
This is against usual typesetting rules and therefore not supported by
LaTeX. I showed you 2 tricks to overcome this and I don't see other ways.
But you should have a very, very important reason to print something in the
page margin. Because in case that you print your document by a printing
Sorry Uwe, I forgot to add that the geometry package allows me to set up
exactly what I need in the way of margins.
It can set:
paperwidth = inner + width + outer [I am calling them inner and outer
rather than left and right, because it is double sided]
where inner and outer are true margins,
Am 31.05.2010 03:06, schrieb george legge:
It is the outer edge of this (marginparsep + marginparwidth) region which I
attempted to justify my figures to.
My requirement was that the outer edge of a figure line up with the outer
edge of the marginpara,
I expect that you need low-level TeX
Am 30.05.2010 05:45, schrieb george legge:
Thank you Uwe. "Overhang" is exactly what I need.
However, I do not want wrapping, and "overhang" seems to be offered only by
Wrap Float.
I don't think a plain Figure Float recognizes "overhang".
Is there an easy way to insert an "overhang" command
>
> Is there an easy way to insert an "overhang" command into a Figure Float?
>>
>
> You only need to specify a width for your image that is wider than the page
> or column width. Use for example a width of 110 column%. Attached is an
> example where I have done this for a box.
>
> regards Uwe
>
Am 30.05.2010 23:22, schrieb george legge:
Thank you Uwe, but that merely enlarges the image and extends it into the
margin.
It does not MOVE the image. An overhang moves the image across into the
margin which is what I need.
This is against usual typesetting rules and therefore not
>
> This is against usual typesetting rules and therefore not supported by
> LaTeX. I showed you 2 tricks to overcome this and I don't see other ways.
> But you should have a very, very important reason to print something in the
> page margin. Because in case that you print your document by a
Sorry Uwe, I forgot to add that the geometry package allows me to set up
exactly what I need in the way of margins.
It can set:
paperwidth = inner + width + outer [I am calling them inner and outer
rather than left and right, because it is double sided]
where inner and outer are true margins,
Am 31.05.2010 03:06, schrieb george legge:
It is the outer edge of this (marginparsep + marginparwidth) region which I
attempted to justify my figures to.
My requirement was that the outer edge of a figure line up with the outer
edge of the marginpara,
I expect that you need low-level TeX
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 11:11 AM, Uwe Stöhr uwesto...@web.de wrote:
Am 29.05.2010 01:04, schrieb george legge:
But it does not appear to tackle the major problem, which is:
How to get figures (of all widths) to justify to a boundary several cm
outside the text edge.
Use a wrapped float.
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 11:11 AM, Uwe Stöhr uwesto...@web.de wrote:
Am 29.05.2010 01:04, schrieb george legge:
But it does not appear to tackle the major problem, which is:
How to get figures (of all widths) to justify to a boundary several cm
outside the text edge.
Use a wrapped float.
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 11:11 AM, Uwe Stöhr wrote:
> Am 29.05.2010 01:04, schrieb george legge:
>
>
> But it does not appear to tackle the major problem, which is:
>> How to get figures (of all widths) to justify to a boundary several cm
>> outside the text edge.
>>
>
> Use a
In LyX memoir class, 2-sided, single column, how can I place figures so that
their outer edges line up with the outer edge of a wide (outer margin)? With
figures 1.2cm from the edge of the page, they then visually define the wide
outer margin. I want the captions (without caption numbers printed)
On 28/05/2010 5:09 PM, george legge wrote:
In LyX memoir class, 2-sided, single column, how can I place figures so that
their outer edges line up with the outer edge of a wide (outer margin)? With
figures 1.2cm from the edge of the page, they then visually define the wide
outer margin. I want
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Julien Rioux jri...@physics.utoronto.cawrote:
Hi,
I am not completely clear on what you want to accomplish, but you might want
to have a look at the sidecap package [1]. I wrote a minimalistic module to
use the package in LyX [2]. Maybe that would help. Otherwise,
Am 29.05.2010 01:04, schrieb george legge:
But it does not appear to tackle the major problem, which is:
How to get figures (of all widths) to justify to a boundary several cm
outside the text edge.
Use a wrapped float. Its option Overhang is exactly what you need. Attached
is a LyX example
In LyX memoir class, 2-sided, single column, how can I place figures so that
their outer edges line up with the outer edge of a wide (outer margin)? With
figures 1.2cm from the edge of the page, they then visually define the wide
outer margin. I want the captions (without caption numbers printed)
On 28/05/2010 5:09 PM, george legge wrote:
In LyX memoir class, 2-sided, single column, how can I place figures so that
their outer edges line up with the outer edge of a wide (outer margin)? With
figures 1.2cm from the edge of the page, they then visually define the wide
outer margin. I want
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Julien Rioux jri...@physics.utoronto.cawrote:
Hi,
I am not completely clear on what you want to accomplish, but you might want
to have a look at the sidecap package [1]. I wrote a minimalistic module to
use the package in LyX [2]. Maybe that would help. Otherwise,
Am 29.05.2010 01:04, schrieb george legge:
But it does not appear to tackle the major problem, which is:
How to get figures (of all widths) to justify to a boundary several cm
outside the text edge.
Use a wrapped float. Its option Overhang is exactly what you need. Attached
is a LyX example
In LyX memoir class, 2-sided, single column, how can I place figures so that
their outer edges line up with the outer edge of a wide (outer margin)? With
figures 1.2cm from the edge of the page, they then visually define the wide
outer margin. I want the captions (without caption numbers printed)
On 28/05/2010 5:09 PM, george legge wrote:
In LyX memoir class, 2-sided, single column, how can I place figures so that
their outer edges line up with the outer edge of a wide (outer margin)? With
figures 1.2cm from the edge of the page, they then visually define the wide
outer margin. I want
On Sat, May 29, 2010 at 8:33 AM, Julien Rioux wrote:
Hi,
I am not completely clear on what you want to accomplish, but you might want
to have a look at the sidecap package [1]. I wrote a minimalistic module to
use the package in LyX [2]. Maybe that would help.
Am 29.05.2010 01:04, schrieb george legge:
But it does not appear to tackle the major problem, which is:
How to get figures (of all widths) to justify to a boundary several cm
outside the text edge.
Use a wrapped float. Its option "Overhang" is exactly what you need. Attached
is a LyX
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