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thesis_lore [2014/04/17 21:36] – chat.hull | thesis_lore [2015/03/24 19:20] – [Tables] petigura |
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\setlength{\tabcolsep}{0.05in} | \setlength{\tabcolsep}{0.05in} |
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Adjust to taste. If that's not enough, you can use the pdflscape package and invoke the landscape environment to make your tables landscaped. (Don't use \rotate command.) Here's how a table might begin: | Adjust to taste. If you're really desperate, you can make the columns separation negative |
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| % change |
| \begin{deluxetable}{l*{14}{r}ccc} |
| % to |
| \begin{deluxetable}{@{\extracolsep{-6pt}}l*{14}{r}ccc} |
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| If that's not enough, you can use the pdflscape package and invoke the landscape environment to make your tables landscaped. (Don't use \rotate command.) Here's how a table might begin: |
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\begin{landscape} | \begin{landscape} |
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The downside to using the landscape environment is that you have to put it outside of the floating table environment. This results in LaTeX putting the table in that exact place relative to the text, meaning you could end up with half the page before the table being empty. Another alternative, at least for tables that are wide, but short, is to use the "sidewaystable" environment in the "rotating" package. Whether or not this would suffer the same problems as deluxetable when also dealing with very long tables is unknown. | The downside to using the landscape environment is that you have to put it outside of the floating table environment. This results in LaTeX putting the table in that exact place relative to the text, meaning you could end up with half the page before the table being empty. Another alternative, at least for tables that are wide, but short, is to use the "sidewaystable" environment in the "rotating" package. Whether or not this would suffer the same problems as deluxetable when also dealing with very long tables is unknown. |
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====Figures==== | ====Figures==== |