Hello,
Thank you for your suggestions.
Fabrice
Le dim. 26 août 2018 à 15:19, Aditya Mahajan a écrit :
> On Sun, 26 Aug 2018, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
>
> > The normal alignment of figures is with the bottom of the figure on the
> > baseline.
> >
> > You can control the vertical alignment with a
On Sun, 26 Aug 2018, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
The normal alignment of figures is with the bottom of the figure on the
baseline.
You can control the vertical alignment with a few box commands but what you
should use depends on the context, in tables I would use 2 while in running
text 3 can b
The normal alignment of figures is with the bottom of the figure on the
baseline.
You can control the vertical alignment with a few box commands but what
you should use depends on the context, in tables I would use 2 while in
running text 3 can be better. Which alignment you’re using is your c
Number them by hand (or replace the descriptions I used with enumerations).
The alignment of the graphics can be improved with the \tbox command,
which raises the argument by the height of a strut.
\useMPlibrary[dum]
\switchtobodyfont[pagella,12pt]
\setuplayout
[topspace=10mm,
header=1
On Sun, Aug 26, 2018 at 1:49 AM Fabrice Couvreur <
fabrice1.couvr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello,
> In the table, how to have a. b. c. in each line instead of a. a. a ?
> Is the macro to place the figures on the baseline of the labels to be
> improved ?
> Thanks.
> Fabrice
>
> \useMPlibrary[dum]
>
>
Hello,
In the table, how to have a. b. c. in each line instead of a. a. a ?
Is the macro to place the figures on the baseline of the labels to be
improved ?
Thanks.
Fabrice
\useMPlibrary[dum]
\switchtobodyfont[pagella,12pt]
\unexpanded\def\Item#1{\framed[frame=off,location=hanging]{#1}}
\setupl