[OS X TeX] memoir class, Table questions, position of floats, line numbering
Denis Chabot
chabotd at globetrotter.net
Fri Jun 11 04:09:53 CEST 2004
Hi,
I am working on my first document finally, using TeXShop and LaTeX.
This is not going too badly, thanks to things I've been told before on
this list, the sample document of Will Robertson (thanks!), and some
online guides I downloaded.
One first question that comes to my mind is: why does the sample
document use the memoir class, which is not described on most LaTeX
guides? I found a 300 p document on memoir, but before digging into it
(it is not light reading...), I'd like to know if there are significant
advantages over the article class which would make this a good time
investment.
I had to make a few tables. I noticed that if you choose the Table
macros in TeXShop, you get the elements of a Table pasted into your
document, and the first line is:
\begin{table}[htdp]
What does the d do? I only found the description for h, t, b and p, not
d.
To continue with Tables, is there a way to merge two cells vertically?
I had to trim the column headings quite a bit to get a table to fit
within the width of the text. Maybe I could have reduced the font size
(maybe this will be ugly, but I'd like to try). Is there a way to
reduce font size for a whole table? Maybe the same technique would
allow me to make headings of a table bold, but the rest plain, when
journals want this style?
I found how to center headings that happened to be multicolumn, but how
do you center a column heading when you want the remainder of the
column to be right aligned?
Anyway, my tables worked quite well for a first attempt, but I must say
it is slower to make a table this way versus a graphical interface.
I love not having to worry about where my figures end up (one of my
main beef with Word). But many ended up alone on a page, when I thought
there was enough space for a few lines of text on the same page. I have
a very small sample size, remember, but it looks to me that text will
be placed with my floats only if whole paragraphs can fit. Is there a
way to have parts of paragraph accompany floats on a page, or if this a
behavior that insures better looking document and I should not mess
with it?
Finally, although I don't need this right now, in biology we often have
to submit documents that have lots of space between the lines within
paragraphs (double interligne in French). It is not pretty, but
journals want the manuscripts that way. How would you do this? And if
the journal also wants line numbers to appear in the left margin, can
this be done with LaTeX?
Well, this is enough for one message. Thanks in advance to those who
can help.
Denis Chabot
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