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numbering subfigures



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InTypographic conventions for free space between subfigures?How to justify subfig subfloats?Aligning Images in a grid styleAdding multiple images in a LaTeX document in the same “area”Images and listings as non-floating figuresMultiple images and proper side-caption positioningForcing subfigures to have same height and take overall X% of linewidth in LaTeXHow to include 3 vertically aligned subfigures, while making them appear as 3 separate “Main” (and not sub-) figures?How to fix figures on specific pages at bottom over page width?Keep Figures RIGHT AFTER text












0















I've got three figures that I place vertically on a half page.



begin{figure}
includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{images/fig1a.png}
includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{images/fig1b.png}
includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{images/fig1c.png}
end{figure}


I want to subnumber them and put the (a), (b) and (c) at the corners of the images. All three figures are of different resolutions and sizes. It's hard do that and get them vertically aligned in the resulted pdf. So, my question is if there is a proper tool or package to do this automatically?



Regards
Ilya










share|improve this question














bumped to the homepage by Community 9 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.











  • 3





    Welcome to TeX SX! Try the subfigure environment, from the subcaption package.

    – Bernard
    Nov 9 '18 at 22:54











  • Which corner? Lower left is easiest.

    – John Kormylo
    Nov 10 '18 at 4:34











  • Ideally upper right or left.

    – Ilya Bryukhanov
    Nov 10 '18 at 6:44
















0















I've got three figures that I place vertically on a half page.



begin{figure}
includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{images/fig1a.png}
includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{images/fig1b.png}
includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{images/fig1c.png}
end{figure}


I want to subnumber them and put the (a), (b) and (c) at the corners of the images. All three figures are of different resolutions and sizes. It's hard do that and get them vertically aligned in the resulted pdf. So, my question is if there is a proper tool or package to do this automatically?



Regards
Ilya










share|improve this question














bumped to the homepage by Community 9 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.











  • 3





    Welcome to TeX SX! Try the subfigure environment, from the subcaption package.

    – Bernard
    Nov 9 '18 at 22:54











  • Which corner? Lower left is easiest.

    – John Kormylo
    Nov 10 '18 at 4:34











  • Ideally upper right or left.

    – Ilya Bryukhanov
    Nov 10 '18 at 6:44














0












0








0








I've got three figures that I place vertically on a half page.



begin{figure}
includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{images/fig1a.png}
includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{images/fig1b.png}
includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{images/fig1c.png}
end{figure}


I want to subnumber them and put the (a), (b) and (c) at the corners of the images. All three figures are of different resolutions and sizes. It's hard do that and get them vertically aligned in the resulted pdf. So, my question is if there is a proper tool or package to do this automatically?



Regards
Ilya










share|improve this question














I've got three figures that I place vertically on a half page.



begin{figure}
includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{images/fig1a.png}
includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{images/fig1b.png}
includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{images/fig1c.png}
end{figure}


I want to subnumber them and put the (a), (b) and (c) at the corners of the images. All three figures are of different resolutions and sizes. It's hard do that and get them vertically aligned in the resulted pdf. So, my question is if there is a proper tool or package to do this automatically?



Regards
Ilya







floats numbering






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 9 '18 at 22:45









Ilya BryukhanovIlya Bryukhanov

1




1





bumped to the homepage by Community 9 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







bumped to the homepage by Community 9 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.










  • 3





    Welcome to TeX SX! Try the subfigure environment, from the subcaption package.

    – Bernard
    Nov 9 '18 at 22:54











  • Which corner? Lower left is easiest.

    – John Kormylo
    Nov 10 '18 at 4:34











  • Ideally upper right or left.

    – Ilya Bryukhanov
    Nov 10 '18 at 6:44














  • 3





    Welcome to TeX SX! Try the subfigure environment, from the subcaption package.

    – Bernard
    Nov 9 '18 at 22:54











  • Which corner? Lower left is easiest.

    – John Kormylo
    Nov 10 '18 at 4:34











  • Ideally upper right or left.

    – Ilya Bryukhanov
    Nov 10 '18 at 6:44








3




3





Welcome to TeX SX! Try the subfigure environment, from the subcaption package.

– Bernard
Nov 9 '18 at 22:54





Welcome to TeX SX! Try the subfigure environment, from the subcaption package.

– Bernard
Nov 9 '18 at 22:54













Which corner? Lower left is easiest.

– John Kormylo
Nov 10 '18 at 4:34





Which corner? Lower left is easiest.

– John Kormylo
Nov 10 '18 at 4:34













Ideally upper right or left.

– Ilya Bryukhanov
Nov 10 '18 at 6:44





Ideally upper right or left.

– Ilya Bryukhanov
Nov 10 '18 at 6:44










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0














There are a few details which can be painful to discover, since some are from the caption manual. The blank lines (par) are needed to keep them from winding up side by side.



You said different sizes. Although the MWE uses known sizes, this will work for images with unknown sizes. subcaptionbox does this automatically (thank you Alex Sommerfelt for pointing this out), but it is no big deal. All subfigures are basically minipages with captions.



documentclass{article}
usepackage[singlelinecheck=off]{subcaption}
usepackage{graphicx}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subcaptionbox{}{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-a}}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-b}}% measure width
begin{subfigure}{wd0}
usebox0
caption{}
end{subfigure}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-c}}% DIY caption
begin{minipage}{wd0}
leavevmodellap{(c)~}% left
usebox0
(c)
end{minipage}
caption{There is usually one of these too.}
end{figure}
end{document}


demo





These solutions puts the subcaption at the upper right corner.



documentclass{article}
usepackage[singlelinecheck=off,justification=raggedleft,position=top]{subcaption}
usepackage{graphicx}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subcaptionbox{}{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-a}}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-b}}% measure width
begin{subfigure}{wd0}
caption{}
usebox0
end{subfigure}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-c}}% DIY caption
begin{minipage}{wd0}% in case you want to align side by side
strutmakebox[wd0][r]{(c)}par% above
usebox0%
rlap{raisebox{dimexpr ht0-topskip}{(c)}}% right
end{minipage}

caption{There is usually one of these too.}
end{figure}
end{document}


demo 2






share|improve this answer


























  • You write "The subfig package does this automatically". This is true, but the subcaption package does this automatically, too, when subcaptionbox is used instead of the subfigure environment.

    – Axel Sommerfeldt
    Nov 10 '18 at 21:11











  • @AxelSommerfeldt - Ah yes. An even better reason to stop using subfig.

    – John Kormylo
    Nov 11 '18 at 14:43



















0














I think the simplest of all methods is to use the subfigure package, that adjusts to the desired dimensions of your images, althought it has problems with tikz, so I avoid it, but it works wonderfully with imported graphics



documentclass{article}
usepackage{graphicx,subfigure}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subfigure[Subcaption a.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-a}}
subfigure[Subcaption b.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-b}}
subfigure[Subcaption c.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-c}}
caption{Caption}
end{figure}
end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer
























  • subfigure is obsolete package. instead of it is suggested to use the subfig package.

    – Zarko
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:51












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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














There are a few details which can be painful to discover, since some are from the caption manual. The blank lines (par) are needed to keep them from winding up side by side.



You said different sizes. Although the MWE uses known sizes, this will work for images with unknown sizes. subcaptionbox does this automatically (thank you Alex Sommerfelt for pointing this out), but it is no big deal. All subfigures are basically minipages with captions.



documentclass{article}
usepackage[singlelinecheck=off]{subcaption}
usepackage{graphicx}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subcaptionbox{}{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-a}}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-b}}% measure width
begin{subfigure}{wd0}
usebox0
caption{}
end{subfigure}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-c}}% DIY caption
begin{minipage}{wd0}
leavevmodellap{(c)~}% left
usebox0
(c)
end{minipage}
caption{There is usually one of these too.}
end{figure}
end{document}


demo





These solutions puts the subcaption at the upper right corner.



documentclass{article}
usepackage[singlelinecheck=off,justification=raggedleft,position=top]{subcaption}
usepackage{graphicx}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subcaptionbox{}{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-a}}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-b}}% measure width
begin{subfigure}{wd0}
caption{}
usebox0
end{subfigure}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-c}}% DIY caption
begin{minipage}{wd0}% in case you want to align side by side
strutmakebox[wd0][r]{(c)}par% above
usebox0%
rlap{raisebox{dimexpr ht0-topskip}{(c)}}% right
end{minipage}

caption{There is usually one of these too.}
end{figure}
end{document}


demo 2






share|improve this answer


























  • You write "The subfig package does this automatically". This is true, but the subcaption package does this automatically, too, when subcaptionbox is used instead of the subfigure environment.

    – Axel Sommerfeldt
    Nov 10 '18 at 21:11











  • @AxelSommerfeldt - Ah yes. An even better reason to stop using subfig.

    – John Kormylo
    Nov 11 '18 at 14:43
















0














There are a few details which can be painful to discover, since some are from the caption manual. The blank lines (par) are needed to keep them from winding up side by side.



You said different sizes. Although the MWE uses known sizes, this will work for images with unknown sizes. subcaptionbox does this automatically (thank you Alex Sommerfelt for pointing this out), but it is no big deal. All subfigures are basically minipages with captions.



documentclass{article}
usepackage[singlelinecheck=off]{subcaption}
usepackage{graphicx}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subcaptionbox{}{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-a}}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-b}}% measure width
begin{subfigure}{wd0}
usebox0
caption{}
end{subfigure}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-c}}% DIY caption
begin{minipage}{wd0}
leavevmodellap{(c)~}% left
usebox0
(c)
end{minipage}
caption{There is usually one of these too.}
end{figure}
end{document}


demo





These solutions puts the subcaption at the upper right corner.



documentclass{article}
usepackage[singlelinecheck=off,justification=raggedleft,position=top]{subcaption}
usepackage{graphicx}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subcaptionbox{}{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-a}}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-b}}% measure width
begin{subfigure}{wd0}
caption{}
usebox0
end{subfigure}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-c}}% DIY caption
begin{minipage}{wd0}% in case you want to align side by side
strutmakebox[wd0][r]{(c)}par% above
usebox0%
rlap{raisebox{dimexpr ht0-topskip}{(c)}}% right
end{minipage}

caption{There is usually one of these too.}
end{figure}
end{document}


demo 2






share|improve this answer


























  • You write "The subfig package does this automatically". This is true, but the subcaption package does this automatically, too, when subcaptionbox is used instead of the subfigure environment.

    – Axel Sommerfeldt
    Nov 10 '18 at 21:11











  • @AxelSommerfeldt - Ah yes. An even better reason to stop using subfig.

    – John Kormylo
    Nov 11 '18 at 14:43














0












0








0







There are a few details which can be painful to discover, since some are from the caption manual. The blank lines (par) are needed to keep them from winding up side by side.



You said different sizes. Although the MWE uses known sizes, this will work for images with unknown sizes. subcaptionbox does this automatically (thank you Alex Sommerfelt for pointing this out), but it is no big deal. All subfigures are basically minipages with captions.



documentclass{article}
usepackage[singlelinecheck=off]{subcaption}
usepackage{graphicx}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subcaptionbox{}{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-a}}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-b}}% measure width
begin{subfigure}{wd0}
usebox0
caption{}
end{subfigure}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-c}}% DIY caption
begin{minipage}{wd0}
leavevmodellap{(c)~}% left
usebox0
(c)
end{minipage}
caption{There is usually one of these too.}
end{figure}
end{document}


demo





These solutions puts the subcaption at the upper right corner.



documentclass{article}
usepackage[singlelinecheck=off,justification=raggedleft,position=top]{subcaption}
usepackage{graphicx}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subcaptionbox{}{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-a}}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-b}}% measure width
begin{subfigure}{wd0}
caption{}
usebox0
end{subfigure}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-c}}% DIY caption
begin{minipage}{wd0}% in case you want to align side by side
strutmakebox[wd0][r]{(c)}par% above
usebox0%
rlap{raisebox{dimexpr ht0-topskip}{(c)}}% right
end{minipage}

caption{There is usually one of these too.}
end{figure}
end{document}


demo 2






share|improve this answer















There are a few details which can be painful to discover, since some are from the caption manual. The blank lines (par) are needed to keep them from winding up side by side.



You said different sizes. Although the MWE uses known sizes, this will work for images with unknown sizes. subcaptionbox does this automatically (thank you Alex Sommerfelt for pointing this out), but it is no big deal. All subfigures are basically minipages with captions.



documentclass{article}
usepackage[singlelinecheck=off]{subcaption}
usepackage{graphicx}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subcaptionbox{}{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-a}}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-b}}% measure width
begin{subfigure}{wd0}
usebox0
caption{}
end{subfigure}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-c}}% DIY caption
begin{minipage}{wd0}
leavevmodellap{(c)~}% left
usebox0
(c)
end{minipage}
caption{There is usually one of these too.}
end{figure}
end{document}


demo





These solutions puts the subcaption at the upper right corner.



documentclass{article}
usepackage[singlelinecheck=off,justification=raggedleft,position=top]{subcaption}
usepackage{graphicx}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subcaptionbox{}{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-a}}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-b}}% measure width
begin{subfigure}{wd0}
caption{}
usebox0
end{subfigure}

sbox0{includegraphics[width=0.4textwidth]{example-image-c}}% DIY caption
begin{minipage}{wd0}% in case you want to align side by side
strutmakebox[wd0][r]{(c)}par% above
usebox0%
rlap{raisebox{dimexpr ht0-topskip}{(c)}}% right
end{minipage}

caption{There is usually one of these too.}
end{figure}
end{document}


demo 2







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 11 '18 at 15:19

























answered Nov 10 '18 at 4:53









John KormyloJohn Kormylo

46.6k22672




46.6k22672













  • You write "The subfig package does this automatically". This is true, but the subcaption package does this automatically, too, when subcaptionbox is used instead of the subfigure environment.

    – Axel Sommerfeldt
    Nov 10 '18 at 21:11











  • @AxelSommerfeldt - Ah yes. An even better reason to stop using subfig.

    – John Kormylo
    Nov 11 '18 at 14:43



















  • You write "The subfig package does this automatically". This is true, but the subcaption package does this automatically, too, when subcaptionbox is used instead of the subfigure environment.

    – Axel Sommerfeldt
    Nov 10 '18 at 21:11











  • @AxelSommerfeldt - Ah yes. An even better reason to stop using subfig.

    – John Kormylo
    Nov 11 '18 at 14:43

















You write "The subfig package does this automatically". This is true, but the subcaption package does this automatically, too, when subcaptionbox is used instead of the subfigure environment.

– Axel Sommerfeldt
Nov 10 '18 at 21:11





You write "The subfig package does this automatically". This is true, but the subcaption package does this automatically, too, when subcaptionbox is used instead of the subfigure environment.

– Axel Sommerfeldt
Nov 10 '18 at 21:11













@AxelSommerfeldt - Ah yes. An even better reason to stop using subfig.

– John Kormylo
Nov 11 '18 at 14:43





@AxelSommerfeldt - Ah yes. An even better reason to stop using subfig.

– John Kormylo
Nov 11 '18 at 14:43











0














I think the simplest of all methods is to use the subfigure package, that adjusts to the desired dimensions of your images, althought it has problems with tikz, so I avoid it, but it works wonderfully with imported graphics



documentclass{article}
usepackage{graphicx,subfigure}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subfigure[Subcaption a.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-a}}
subfigure[Subcaption b.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-b}}
subfigure[Subcaption c.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-c}}
caption{Caption}
end{figure}
end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer
























  • subfigure is obsolete package. instead of it is suggested to use the subfig package.

    – Zarko
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:51
















0














I think the simplest of all methods is to use the subfigure package, that adjusts to the desired dimensions of your images, althought it has problems with tikz, so I avoid it, but it works wonderfully with imported graphics



documentclass{article}
usepackage{graphicx,subfigure}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subfigure[Subcaption a.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-a}}
subfigure[Subcaption b.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-b}}
subfigure[Subcaption c.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-c}}
caption{Caption}
end{figure}
end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer
























  • subfigure is obsolete package. instead of it is suggested to use the subfig package.

    – Zarko
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:51














0












0








0







I think the simplest of all methods is to use the subfigure package, that adjusts to the desired dimensions of your images, althought it has problems with tikz, so I avoid it, but it works wonderfully with imported graphics



documentclass{article}
usepackage{graphicx,subfigure}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subfigure[Subcaption a.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-a}}
subfigure[Subcaption b.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-b}}
subfigure[Subcaption c.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-c}}
caption{Caption}
end{figure}
end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer













I think the simplest of all methods is to use the subfigure package, that adjusts to the desired dimensions of your images, althought it has problems with tikz, so I avoid it, but it works wonderfully with imported graphics



documentclass{article}
usepackage{graphicx,subfigure}
begin{document}
begin{figure}
centering
subfigure[Subcaption a.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-a}}
subfigure[Subcaption b.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-b}}
subfigure[Subcaption c.]{includegraphics[width=.6textwidth]{example-image-c}}
caption{Caption}
end{figure}
end{document}


enter image description here







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 11 '18 at 21:08









José Ignacio Cuevas BarrientosJosé Ignacio Cuevas Barrientos

211




211













  • subfigure is obsolete package. instead of it is suggested to use the subfig package.

    – Zarko
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:51



















  • subfigure is obsolete package. instead of it is suggested to use the subfig package.

    – Zarko
    Dec 11 '18 at 22:51

















subfigure is obsolete package. instead of it is suggested to use the subfig package.

– Zarko
Dec 11 '18 at 22:51





subfigure is obsolete package. instead of it is suggested to use the subfig package.

– Zarko
Dec 11 '18 at 22:51


















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